Morphine-conditioned changes in locomotor activity: role of the conditioned stimulus.
| Author | |
|---|---|
| Abstract | :  When a multisensory environment was reliably paired with morphine (2 mg/kg) in rats, that environment, in a drug-free test, evoked a hyperactive conditioned response (CR). When an olfactory cue (banana odor) was the only stimulus element reliably paired with morphine, it also elicited a hyperactive CR. However, a gustatory cue (saccharin solution) evoked a hypoactive CR. This taste-elicited decrease in activity was dose dependent; morphine at 2 and 4 mg/kg conditioned hypoactivity, whereas a higher dose (8 mg/kg) did not. A robust conditioned saccharin aversion occurred only at the highest dose of morphine, suggesting disassociation between the hypoactive CR and taste aversion. A taste cue present during context conditioning also prevented either acquisition or expression of the hyperactive CR to the context. The modality of the conditioned stimulus is a critical determinant of the form of the CR in a morphine locomotor conditioning paradigm. | 
| Year of Publication | :  1998 | 
| Journal | :  Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology | 
| Volume | :  6 | 
| Issue | :  2 | 
| Number of Pages | :  131-8 | 
| ISSN Number | :  1064-1297 | 
| URL | :  http://content.apa.org/journals/pha/6/2/131 | 
| DOI | :  10.1037//1064-1297.6.2.131 | 
| Short Title | :  Exp Clin Psychopharmacol | 
| Download citation |