Rationale: In Pavlovian conditioning research, nicotine is typically conceptualized as the unconditioned stimulus (US) that becomes associated with an exteroceptive conditioned stimulus (CS). This research has not explored the possibility that nicotine can also function as a CS. Objectives: The present research examined whether nicotine served as a CS for the presence (CS+) or absence (CS–) of sucrose and started defining its specificity. Methods and results: Rats trained in the CS+ condition had nicotine (0.4 mg/kg, base) paired intermittently with brief access to sucrose. Intermixed were saline sessions without sucrose. Nicotine acquired the ability to evoke goal tracking. This conditioned response (CR) decreased across extinction session...
Previous research has shown that a nicotine conditional stimulus (CS) can compete with (i.e., oversh...
Rationale: Conditioned environmental stimuli are important determinants of drug-taking and -seeking ...
Pavlovian conditioning processes contribute to the etiology of nicotine dependence. Conditioning inv...
Rationale: In Pavlovian conditioning research, nicotine is typically conceptualized as the unconditi...
The present experiments examined whether a nicotine state could set the occasion for a pairing betwe...
Environmental stimuli that co-occur with tobacco use come to evoke drug-related conditioned response...
Previous studies have shown that the interoceptive nicotine conditional stimulus (CS) functions simi...
Past research has shown that when rats received 0.4 mg base/kg nicotine paired reliably with intermi...
In rats, the pharmacological (interoceptive) effects of nicotine can serve as a signal (conditional ...
Recent research examining Pavlovian appetitive conditioning has extended the associative properties ...
Nicotine has both unconditioned and conditioned stimulus properties. Conditioned stimulus properties...
Nicotine functions as a negative feature in a Pavlovian discriminated goal-tracking task. Whether wi...
Nicotine is commonly considered to be the primary addictive constituent in tobacco products. Therefo...
Rationale — The cannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonist/inverse agonist rimonabant (SR 141716) has been ...
In rats, the pharmacological (interoceptive) effects of 0.4 mg/kg nicotine can serve as a conditiona...
Previous research has shown that a nicotine conditional stimulus (CS) can compete with (i.e., oversh...
Rationale: Conditioned environmental stimuli are important determinants of drug-taking and -seeking ...
Pavlovian conditioning processes contribute to the etiology of nicotine dependence. Conditioning inv...
Rationale: In Pavlovian conditioning research, nicotine is typically conceptualized as the unconditi...
The present experiments examined whether a nicotine state could set the occasion for a pairing betwe...
Environmental stimuli that co-occur with tobacco use come to evoke drug-related conditioned response...
Previous studies have shown that the interoceptive nicotine conditional stimulus (CS) functions simi...
Past research has shown that when rats received 0.4 mg base/kg nicotine paired reliably with intermi...
In rats, the pharmacological (interoceptive) effects of nicotine can serve as a signal (conditional ...
Recent research examining Pavlovian appetitive conditioning has extended the associative properties ...
Nicotine has both unconditioned and conditioned stimulus properties. Conditioned stimulus properties...
Nicotine functions as a negative feature in a Pavlovian discriminated goal-tracking task. Whether wi...
Nicotine is commonly considered to be the primary addictive constituent in tobacco products. Therefo...
Rationale — The cannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonist/inverse agonist rimonabant (SR 141716) has been ...
In rats, the pharmacological (interoceptive) effects of 0.4 mg/kg nicotine can serve as a conditiona...
Previous research has shown that a nicotine conditional stimulus (CS) can compete with (i.e., oversh...
Rationale: Conditioned environmental stimuli are important determinants of drug-taking and -seeking ...
Pavlovian conditioning processes contribute to the etiology of nicotine dependence. Conditioning inv...