Rats (3 groups, N = 8 per group)
Pimozide (0.5 or 1.0 mg/kg i.p.)
Control (no drug)
Acquisition of avoidance response and suppression of lever-pressing during tonesurrogate
Pimozide impairs the ability to initiate responses rather than associative learning in rats.
Three groups (N = 8) of rats received five 10-trial sessions of one-way avoidance training in which each trial was initiated by a 10-sec tone stimulus and terminated either by a shuttle response during the tone (avoidance) or by a response during the electric shock (escape). Rats in groups treated with pimozide (0.5 or 1.0 mg/kg i.p.) failed to acquire to avoidance response although they escaped readily when shock was presented, whereas control rats consistently avoided the shock. The same rats then received several sessions of food-reinforced lever-pressing in a different apparatus; no drugs were given during these sessions. When responding had stabilized, the tone that had signalled shock in the avoidance sessions was presented for a 1-min period. A significant decrease in responding during the tone was observed in all groups when compared to unshocked controls, demonstrating that the pimozide-treated rats, although failing to acquire the avoidance response in the shuttle box, had learned the association between the tone and shock. The results suggested that the neuroleptic-treated animals failed to avoid because of a deficit in the ability to initiate responses rather than a deficit in associative learning.
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Gabriel Scally
University of Bristol
L.J. Donaldson
Global Forum for Health Research
BMJ
Durham University
Vitenparken
John Snow (United States)
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Scally et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d6f8ea733a2b54c8aa87ae — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.317.7150.61
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