Behavioral economics of drug self-administration. I. Functional equivalence of response requirement and drug dose

Response requirement and dose of drug per administration are two separate factors that have been demonstrated to control drug self-administration. Recent developments in behavioral economics have shown that these two factors are in fact functionally equivalent for nondrug reinforcers, as indicated b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Life Sciences 1990, Vol.47 (17), p.1501-1510
Hauptverfasser: Bickel, Warren K., DeGrandpre, R.J., Higgins, Stephen T., Hughes, John R.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Response requirement and dose of drug per administration are two separate factors that have been demonstrated to control drug self-administration. Recent developments in behavioral economics have shown that these two factors are in fact functionally equivalent for nondrug reinforcers, as indicated by a unit-price analysis. In this review, the unit-price notion was tested for drugs as reinforcers via a re-analysis of ten drug self-administration studies. The results of the re-analysis indicated that response requirement and reinforcer magnitude, the constituents of unit price, have functionally equivalent effects on drug consumption and that a positively decelerating demand curve is produced as unit price increases. This suggests that the behavioral-economic notion of unit price is a more parsimonious explanation of the effects of response requirement and dose in drug self-administration studies, in that it integrates and describes what was previously considered to be two distinct operations.
ISSN:0024-3205
1879-0631
DOI:10.1016/0024-3205(90)90178-T