4.2 Article

Intermittent access training produces greater motivation for a non-drug reinforcer than long access training

Journal

LEARNING & BEHAVIOR
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 509-523

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13420-022-00512-w

Keywords

Intermittent access; Long access; Saccharin; Behavioral momentum; Animal models of addiction

Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) [DA037269, DA048530]

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Recently, it has been suggested that the intermittent access (IntA) drug self-administration procedure may better reflect addiction-related behavioral changes compared to the long access (LgA) procedure. This study compared the effects of IntA and LgA training on motivation for a saccharin reinforcer and found that IntA training resulted in greater motivation. This suggests that stimulus-reinforcer associations learned during IntA training may contribute to increased motivation.
It has recently been proposed that the intermittent access (IntA) drug self-administration procedure better produces behavioral changes relevant to addiction than the long access (LgA) procedure. In this version of the IntA procedure, the drug is made available for a 5-min period during each half hour of a 6-h session. In contrast, on the LgA procedure, the drug is available continuously for 6 h. Previous studies have found that IntA drug self-administration produces greater drug motivation, measured by increased progressive ratio breakpoints, than LgA self-administration. It has been hypothesized that this effect is due to the rapid, spiking brain levels of the drug, and consequent neuroadaptations, experienced by rats during IntA sessions. However, no study has compared the effects of IntA versus LgA training on reinforcer motivation when using a non-drug reinforcer. The present study compared motivation for a saccharin reinforcer after IntA or LgA training. In Experiment 1, separate groups of rats lever-pressed for saccharin on the IntA or LgA procedures. In Experiment 2, a within-subjects design was used where rats pressed one lever on the IntA procedure and another lever on the LgA procedure for saccharin. In both experiments, IntA training produced greater breakpoints than LgA training. As no drug was used here, spiking drug levels could not have been responsible for the increased saccharin motivation observed after IntA training. Instead, it is proposed that differences in stimulus-reinforcer associations learned during IntA versus LgA training may be responsible for the effect. Future research is needed to determine the extent to which such learning factors may contribute to the increased motivation observed after IntA training with drug reinforcers.

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