Rationale: Among the various experimental protocols that have been used to measure drug reward in laboratory animals, conditioned place preference (CPP) has been one of the most popular. However, a number of controversial issues have surrounded the use of this experimental protocol. Objective: The present review provides a theoretical overview of some critical issues relevant to CPP. The advantages and limitations of CPP are also covered. Results: Based on modern and traditional theoretical formulations of Pavlovian conditioning, CPP appears to reflect a preference for a context due to the contiguous association between the context and a drug stimulus. Within this theoretical framework, it seems clear that CPP measures a learning process t...
This article describes the proceedings of a symposium at the 2001 RSA annual meeting in Montreal, Qu...
Pain associated with cancer is unpredictable and may reflect an inability to quantify it in animals....
Opioid addiction in humans is a chronically relapsing disorder characterized by discontinuous period...
Rationale: Among the various experimental protocols that have been used to measure drug reward in la...
Conditioned Place Preference (CPP) is one of the models most frequently used to study drug use and a...
this article is to give a comprehensive review of those studies that have used the paradigm to expli...
A major criticism of the place conditioning procedure for studying conditioned drug reward is that i...
This article investigated the Conditioned Place Preference (CPP) technique as a useful model for stu...
Rationale Translational research, especially research that bridges studies with humans and nonhuman ...
Place conditioning is widely used to study the conditioned rewarding effects of drugs. In the standa...
A major criticism of the place conditioning procedure for studying conditioned drug reward is that i...
A major criticism of the place conditioning procedure for studying conditioned drug reward is that i...
A major criticism of the place conditioning procedure for studying conditioned drug reward is that i...
Pain associated with cancer is unpredictable and may reflect an inability to quantify it in animals....
Pain associated with cancer is unpredictable and may reflect an inability to quantify it in animals....
This article describes the proceedings of a symposium at the 2001 RSA annual meeting in Montreal, Qu...
Pain associated with cancer is unpredictable and may reflect an inability to quantify it in animals....
Opioid addiction in humans is a chronically relapsing disorder characterized by discontinuous period...
Rationale: Among the various experimental protocols that have been used to measure drug reward in la...
Conditioned Place Preference (CPP) is one of the models most frequently used to study drug use and a...
this article is to give a comprehensive review of those studies that have used the paradigm to expli...
A major criticism of the place conditioning procedure for studying conditioned drug reward is that i...
This article investigated the Conditioned Place Preference (CPP) technique as a useful model for stu...
Rationale Translational research, especially research that bridges studies with humans and nonhuman ...
Place conditioning is widely used to study the conditioned rewarding effects of drugs. In the standa...
A major criticism of the place conditioning procedure for studying conditioned drug reward is that i...
A major criticism of the place conditioning procedure for studying conditioned drug reward is that i...
A major criticism of the place conditioning procedure for studying conditioned drug reward is that i...
Pain associated with cancer is unpredictable and may reflect an inability to quantify it in animals....
Pain associated with cancer is unpredictable and may reflect an inability to quantify it in animals....
This article describes the proceedings of a symposium at the 2001 RSA annual meeting in Montreal, Qu...
Pain associated with cancer is unpredictable and may reflect an inability to quantify it in animals....
Opioid addiction in humans is a chronically relapsing disorder characterized by discontinuous period...