Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Front Behav Neurosci" Category Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Comparing ABA, AAB, and ABC Renewal of Appetitive Pavlovian Conditioned Responding in Alcohol- and Sucrose-Trained Male Rats. Khoo SY, Sciascia JM, Brown A, Chaudhri N 32116588
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Ventral Midbrain NMDA Receptor Blockade: From Enhanced Reward and Dopamine Inactivation. Hernandez G, Cossette MP, Shizgal P, Rompré PP 27616984
PSYCHOLOGY
3 The attribution of incentive salience to Pavlovian alcohol cues: a shift from goal-tracking to sign-tracking. Srey CS, Maddux JM, Chaudhri N 25784867
CSBN
4 The Effects of Electrical and Optical Stimulation of Midbrain Dopaminergic Neurons on Rat 50-kHz Ultrasonic Vocalizations. Scardochio T, Trujillo-Pisanty I, Conover K, Shizgal P, Clarke PB 26696851
CSBN
5 Individual Differences in the Attribution of Incentive Salience to a Pavlovian Alcohol Cue. Villaruel FR, Chaudhri N 28082877
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Adolescent Exposure to Methylphenidate Increases Impulsive Choice Later in Life. Abbas Z, Sweet A, Hernandez G, Arvanitogiannis A 29163086
CSBN

 

Title:Comparing ABA, AAB, and ABC Renewal of Appetitive Pavlovian Conditioned Responding in Alcohol- and Sucrose-Trained Male Rats.
Authors:Khoo SYSciascia JMBrown AChaudhri N
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32116588?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.3389/fnbeh.2020.00005
Publication:Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience
Keywords:Pavlovian conditioningalcoholcontextreinstatementrelapserenewalrewardsucrose
PMID:32116588 Category:Front Behav Neurosci Date Added:2020-03-03
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Center for Studies in Behavioural Neurobiology, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Comparing ABA, AAB, and ABC Renewal of Appetitive Pavlovian Conditioned Responding in Alcohol- and Sucrose-Trained Male Rats.

Front Behav Neurosci. 2020;14:5

Authors: Khoo SY, Sciascia JM, Brown A, Chaudhri N

Abstract

Conditioned responding can be renewed by re-exposure to the conditioning context following extinction in a different context (ABA renewal) or by removal from the extinction context (AAB or ABC renewal). ABA renewal is robust in Pavlovian and operant conditioning paradigms. However, fewer studies have investigated AAB and ABC renewal of appetitive conditioning, and those that did predominantly used operant conditioning tasks. Renewal has theoretical relevance for extinction and for exposure-based treatments for substance use disorders that aim to extinguish reactivity to drug-predictive cues. We therefore investigated ABA, AAB, and ABC renewal of Pavlovian conditioned responding to cues that predicted either alcohol or sucrose. Male, Long-Evans rats (Charles River) were exposed to either 15% ethanol (Study 1: "alcohol") or 10% sucrose (Study 2: "sucrose") in their home cages. Next, they were trained to discriminate between two auditory stimuli (white noise and clicker; 10 s) in conditioning chambers equipped with distinct olfactory, visual, and tactile contextual stimuli (context A). One conditioned stimulus (CS+) was paired with fluid delivery (0.2 ml/CS+; 3.2 ml/session; alcohol or sucrose in separate experiments), and the second CS (CS-) was not. In all sessions (conditioning, extinction, and test), each CS was presented 16 times/session on a variable-time 67-s schedule, and entries into the fluid port were recorded. CS+ port entries were then extinguished by withholding fluid delivery either in context A or in a second, different context (context B). Next, we assessed ABA, AAB, and ABC renewal in the absence of fluid delivery. During extinction, CS+ port entries were initially elevated in context A relative to context B. ABA renewal of CS+ port entries occurred in both alcohol- and sucrose-trained rats. ABC renewal approached statistical significance when data from both experiments were combined. No AAB renewal was observed, and, in fact, alcohol-trained rats showed AAB suppression. These results corroborate the reliability of ABA renewal and suggest that ABC renewal is a modest effect that may require greater statistical power to detect. From a treatment perspective, the lack of AAB renewal suggests that exposure-based treatments for substance use disorders might benefit from implementation in real-world, drug-use contexts.

PMID: 32116588 [PubMed]





BookR developed by Sriram Narayanan
for the Concordia University School of Health
Copyright © 2011-2026
Cookie settings
Concordia University