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Title: FG 7142 selectively decreases nonpunished responding, but has no anxiogenic effects on time allocation in a conflict schedule. Author: Panlilio LV, Weiss SJ, Thomas DA, Glowa JR. Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl); 1992; 108(1-2):185-8. PubMed ID: 1329131. Abstract: Previous work (Thomas et al. 1990) showed that an anxiolytic benzodiazepine increased the time allocated to responding in a conflict situation (where responses were both food-reinforced and shock-punished) versus a nonpunishment situation. The present experiment tested whether a benzodiazepine-receptor inverse agonist (FG 7142, 1-30 mg/kg) would have the opposite effect (i.e., decrease time spent responding in a punishment situation). Chain pulls determined whether a rat's lever presses were reinforced on 1) a lean variable-interval schedule, or 2) a richer variable-interval schedule in which responding also produced shock intermittently. FG 7142 dose-dependently decreased nonpunished lever responding, but did not affect punished responding. The drug nonselectively decreased chain pulling (the schedule-switching response). Like chlordiazepoxide, FG 7142 increased the time spent in the punishment component, showing that not all effects of benzodiazepine-receptor agonists and inverse agonists are opposite. These results are inconsistent with expectations that anxiogenic actions of FG 7142 should 1) decrease punished responding; 2) increase the rate of responses that terminate the punishment condition; and 3) decrease time spent in the punishment component. Rather, nonsuppressed responding seems most sensitive to decreases by FG 7142.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]