{"title":"Peter B. Dews的不朽遗产:利率依赖和冲动选择。","authors":"Raymond C Pitts, Christine E Hughes","doi":"10.1016/j.jpet.2025.103656","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Substantial progress has been made in characterizing effects of a variety of drugs on impulsive behavior and elucidating some of the relevant neurobiological mechanisms. Nevertheless, there are still considerable discrepancies in the literature, both within and across studies. Recent evidence suggests that effects of drugs and other manipulations on impulsive choice can depend upon baseline levels. In this paper, we briefly summarize some of the discrepant effects of acutely administered stimulants and opioids in preclinical studies of impulsive choice and then explore the possibility that some of these discrepancies result from behavioral processes related to a principle in behavioral pharmacology first articulated by Peter B. Dews: rate-dependency. As an example of the law of initial value, rate-dependent effects occur when a drug or other treatment increases relatively low rates and decreases relatively high rates. We then summarize some of our data aimed at identifying potential behavioral mechanisms involved in these effects. In our behavioral procedures, both of these drug classes mainly decrease sensitivity to the reinforcement dimensions typically controlling impulsive choice (reinforcement magnitude and reinforcement delay), effects that can be characterized as rate-dependent. We suggest that these effects might be better described as rate-convergent and, further, that they result from a disruption/destruction of control over choice by reinforcement magnitude and delay. Nevertheless, together with previous reports of rate-dependent effects with impulsive choice, our analyses indicate that rate-dependency remains a useful framework within which to characterize effects of drugs and, thus, illustrate the enduring legacy of Peter B. Dews. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Although stimulants and opioids tend to increase and decrease impulsive choice, respectively, there is substantial variation in these effects both within and across studies. Further analyses of selected experimental results have revealed that these discrepancies may be related to behavioral processes captured by the principle of rate-dependency. It is suggested that these data illustrate the enduring contributions of Peter B. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在表征各种药物对冲动行为的影响和阐明一些相关的神经生物学机制方面取得了实质性进展。然而,在研究内部和跨研究的文献中仍然存在相当大的差异。最近的证据表明,药物和其他操纵对冲动选择的影响可能取决于基线水平。在本文中,我们简要总结了在冲动选择的临床前研究中,急性给药兴奋剂和阿片类药物的一些差异效应,然后探讨了其中一些差异是由行为药理学中与Peter B. Dews首先阐述的一个原则相关的行为过程产生的可能性:速率依赖性。作为初值定律的一个例子,当一种药物或其他治疗增加相对低的比率和减少相对高的比率时,就会出现比率依赖效应。然后,我们总结了一些数据,旨在确定涉及这些影响的潜在行为机制。在我们的行为程序中,这两类药物主要降低了对典型控制冲动选择的强化维度(强化幅度和强化延迟)的敏感性,这种效应可以表征为速率依赖。我们认为,这些效应可能被更好地描述为速率收敛,而且,它们是由强化幅度和延迟对选择控制的破坏/破坏造成的。然而,结合先前关于冲动选择的比率依赖效应的报告,我们的分析表明,比率依赖仍然是一个有用的框架,在这个框架内,可以描述药物的影响,从而说明彼得·b·杜斯的持久遗产。意义声明:尽管兴奋剂和阿片类药物分别倾向于增加和减少冲动选择,但在研究内部和研究之间,这些影响存在实质性差异。对所选实验结果的进一步分析表明,这些差异可能与速率依赖原理捕获的行为过程有关。有人认为,这些数据说明了Peter B. Dews对行为药理学的持久贡献。
The enduring legacy of Peter B. Dews: Rate-dependency and impulsive choice.
Substantial progress has been made in characterizing effects of a variety of drugs on impulsive behavior and elucidating some of the relevant neurobiological mechanisms. Nevertheless, there are still considerable discrepancies in the literature, both within and across studies. Recent evidence suggests that effects of drugs and other manipulations on impulsive choice can depend upon baseline levels. In this paper, we briefly summarize some of the discrepant effects of acutely administered stimulants and opioids in preclinical studies of impulsive choice and then explore the possibility that some of these discrepancies result from behavioral processes related to a principle in behavioral pharmacology first articulated by Peter B. Dews: rate-dependency. As an example of the law of initial value, rate-dependent effects occur when a drug or other treatment increases relatively low rates and decreases relatively high rates. We then summarize some of our data aimed at identifying potential behavioral mechanisms involved in these effects. In our behavioral procedures, both of these drug classes mainly decrease sensitivity to the reinforcement dimensions typically controlling impulsive choice (reinforcement magnitude and reinforcement delay), effects that can be characterized as rate-dependent. We suggest that these effects might be better described as rate-convergent and, further, that they result from a disruption/destruction of control over choice by reinforcement magnitude and delay. Nevertheless, together with previous reports of rate-dependent effects with impulsive choice, our analyses indicate that rate-dependency remains a useful framework within which to characterize effects of drugs and, thus, illustrate the enduring legacy of Peter B. Dews. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Although stimulants and opioids tend to increase and decrease impulsive choice, respectively, there is substantial variation in these effects both within and across studies. Further analyses of selected experimental results have revealed that these discrepancies may be related to behavioral processes captured by the principle of rate-dependency. It is suggested that these data illustrate the enduring contributions of Peter B. Dews to behavioral pharmacology.
期刊介绍:
A leading research journal in the field of pharmacology published since 1909, JPET provides broad coverage of all aspects of the interactions of chemicals with biological systems, including autonomic, behavioral, cardiovascular, cellular, clinical, developmental, gastrointestinal, immuno-, neuro-, pulmonary, and renal pharmacology, as well as analgesics, drug abuse, metabolism and disposition, chemotherapy, and toxicology.