Effects of Methylphenidate on Sensitivity to Reinforcement Delay and to Reinforcement Amount in Pigeons: Implications for Impulsive Choice

Methylphenidate has been shown to decrease impulsive choice (increase choices of a larger more delayed reinforcer). The purpose of this study was to investigate 2 potential behavioral mechanisms of this effect: a drug-induced change in control by reinforcement delay (Experiment 1) and/or by reinforc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology 2016-12, Vol.24 (6), p.464-476
Hauptverfasser: Pitts, Raymond C, Cummings, Craig W, Cummings, Carol, Woodcock, Rebecca L, Hughes, Christine E
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container_issue 6
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container_title Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology
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creator Pitts, Raymond C
Cummings, Craig W
Cummings, Carol
Woodcock, Rebecca L
Hughes, Christine E
description Methylphenidate has been shown to decrease impulsive choice (increase choices of a larger more delayed reinforcer). The purpose of this study was to investigate 2 potential behavioral mechanisms of this effect: a drug-induced change in control by reinforcement delay (Experiment 1) and/or by reinforcement amount (Experiment 2). In Experiment 1, pigeons responded under a rapid-acquisition, concurrent-chains choice procedure involving delay to reinforcement; the option with the shorter delay varied unpredictably across sessions. The pigeons accurately tracked the shorter delay across sessions (i.e., a preference for the option with the shorter delay developed within each session). Methylphenidate selectively decreased sensitivity to reinforcement delay-it attenuated the acquisition of preference at doses that did not systematically affect bias or response rates. In Experiment 2, pigeons responded under a rapid-acquisition, concurrent-chains choice procedure involving reinforcement amount. The pigeons accurately tracked the option with the larger reinforcement amount across sessions. Methylphenidate selectively decreased sensitivity to reinforcement amount-it attenuated the acquisition of preference at doses that did not systematically affect bias or response rates. These data suggest that methylphenidate attenuates the degree to which the various reinforcement dimensions control choice, and that drug effects on impulsive choice depend upon the relative contributions of drug-induced changes in control of behavior by each relevant dimension. Public Health Significance In this study, methylphenidate impaired the impact of both reinforcement delay and reinforcement amount on preference in pigeons. Therefore, predicting methylphenidate's therapeutic utility for a given individual with an impulsive-behavior problem (e.g., attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) may depend upon the knowing its relative impact of these 2 reinforcement mechanisms for that individual.
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The purpose of this study was to investigate 2 potential behavioral mechanisms of this effect: a drug-induced change in control by reinforcement delay (Experiment 1) and/or by reinforcement amount (Experiment 2). In Experiment 1, pigeons responded under a rapid-acquisition, concurrent-chains choice procedure involving delay to reinforcement; the option with the shorter delay varied unpredictably across sessions. The pigeons accurately tracked the shorter delay across sessions (i.e., a preference for the option with the shorter delay developed within each session). Methylphenidate selectively decreased sensitivity to reinforcement delay-it attenuated the acquisition of preference at doses that did not systematically affect bias or response rates. In Experiment 2, pigeons responded under a rapid-acquisition, concurrent-chains choice procedure involving reinforcement amount. The pigeons accurately tracked the option with the larger reinforcement amount across sessions. Methylphenidate selectively decreased sensitivity to reinforcement amount-it attenuated the acquisition of preference at doses that did not systematically affect bias or response rates. These data suggest that methylphenidate attenuates the degree to which the various reinforcement dimensions control choice, and that drug effects on impulsive choice depend upon the relative contributions of drug-induced changes in control of behavior by each relevant dimension. Public Health Significance In this study, methylphenidate impaired the impact of both reinforcement delay and reinforcement amount on preference in pigeons. 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subjects Animal
Animals
Central Nervous System Stimulants - pharmacology
Columbidae
Conditioning, Operant
Delay Discounting
Impulsive Behavior - drug effects
Impulsiveness
Male
Methylphenidate
Methylphenidate - pharmacology
Pigeons
Reinforcement (Psychology)
Reinforcement Amounts
Reinforcement Delay
Reinforcement Schedule
title Effects of Methylphenidate on Sensitivity to Reinforcement Delay and to Reinforcement Amount in Pigeons: Implications for Impulsive Choice
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