Dose-dependent impairment in the performance of a go-no go successive discrimination by chlordiazepoxide |
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Authors: | Cole Sherwood O. Michaleski Abby |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, 08102 Camden, New Jersey, USA |
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Abstract: | After learning a light-cued, go-no go successive discrimination to criterion, male Sprague-Dawley rats received 0, 5, or 10 mg/kg chlordiazepoxide on six performance sessions, followed by two drug-recovery (saline) sessions. Chlordiazepoxide impaired discrimination performance in a dose-dependent manner, with animals in the 5 mg/kg dose condition demonstrating tolerance to the drug after two performance sessions. The degree of discrimination impairment in both drug dose conditions paralleled an increase in responding during no-go phases of the performance task. These findings are consistent with a disinhibitory hypothesis of performance impairment and suggest that CDP-drugged animals have difficulty in withholding incorrect responses.These data were presented at the Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, San Antonio, Texas, 1984 |
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Keywords: | Chlordiazepoxide Performance impairment Go-no go successive discrimination Disinhibitory effects Benzodiazepines |
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