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Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States

Organisms are constantly extracting information from the temporal structure of the environment, which allows them to select appropriate actions and predict impending changes. Several lines of research have suggested that interval timing is modulated by the dopaminergic system. It has been proposed t...

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Autores principales: Sanchez-Castillo, Hugo, Taylor, Kathleen M., Ward, Ryan D., Paz-Trejo, Diana B., Arroyo-Araujo, Maria, Castillo, Oscar Galicia, Balsam, Peter D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4833012/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27087743
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author Sanchez-Castillo, Hugo
Taylor, Kathleen M.
Ward, Ryan D.
Paz-Trejo, Diana B.
Arroyo-Araujo, Maria
Castillo, Oscar Galicia
Balsam, Peter D.
author_facet Sanchez-Castillo, Hugo
Taylor, Kathleen M.
Ward, Ryan D.
Paz-Trejo, Diana B.
Arroyo-Araujo, Maria
Castillo, Oscar Galicia
Balsam, Peter D.
author_sort Sanchez-Castillo, Hugo
collection PubMed
description Organisms are constantly extracting information from the temporal structure of the environment, which allows them to select appropriate actions and predict impending changes. Several lines of research have suggested that interval timing is modulated by the dopaminergic system. It has been proposed that higher levels of dopamine cause an internal clock to speed up, whereas less dopamine causes a deceleration of the clock. In most experiments the subjects are first trained to perform a timing task while drug free. Consequently, most of what is known about the influence of dopaminergic modulation of timing is on well-established timing performance. In the current study the impact of altered DA on the acquisition of temporal control was the focal question. Thirty male Sprague-Dawley rats were distributed randomly into three different groups (haloperidol, d-amphetamine or vehicle). Each animal received an injection 15 min prior to the start of every session from the beginning of interval training. The subjects were trained in a Fixed Interval (FI) 16s schedule followed by training on a peak procedure in which 64s non-reinforced peak trials were intermixed with FI trials. In a final test session all subjects were given vehicle injections and 10 consecutive non-reinforced peak trials to see if training under drug conditions altered the encoding of time. The current study suggests that administration of drugs that modulate dopamine do not alter the encoding temporal durations but do acutely affect the initiation of responding.
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spelling pubmed-48330122016-04-15 Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States Sanchez-Castillo, Hugo Taylor, Kathleen M. Ward, Ryan D. Paz-Trejo, Diana B. Arroyo-Araujo, Maria Castillo, Oscar Galicia Balsam, Peter D. Int J Comp Psychol Article Organisms are constantly extracting information from the temporal structure of the environment, which allows them to select appropriate actions and predict impending changes. Several lines of research have suggested that interval timing is modulated by the dopaminergic system. It has been proposed that higher levels of dopamine cause an internal clock to speed up, whereas less dopamine causes a deceleration of the clock. In most experiments the subjects are first trained to perform a timing task while drug free. Consequently, most of what is known about the influence of dopaminergic modulation of timing is on well-established timing performance. In the current study the impact of altered DA on the acquisition of temporal control was the focal question. Thirty male Sprague-Dawley rats were distributed randomly into three different groups (haloperidol, d-amphetamine or vehicle). Each animal received an injection 15 min prior to the start of every session from the beginning of interval training. The subjects were trained in a Fixed Interval (FI) 16s schedule followed by training on a peak procedure in which 64s non-reinforced peak trials were intermixed with FI trials. In a final test session all subjects were given vehicle injections and 10 consecutive non-reinforced peak trials to see if training under drug conditions altered the encoding of time. The current study suggests that administration of drugs that modulate dopamine do not alter the encoding temporal durations but do acutely affect the initiation of responding. 2015 /pmc/articles/PMC4833012/ /pubmed/27087743 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This work is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution3.0 license, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Article
Sanchez-Castillo, Hugo
Taylor, Kathleen M.
Ward, Ryan D.
Paz-Trejo, Diana B.
Arroyo-Araujo, Maria
Castillo, Oscar Galicia
Balsam, Peter D.
Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States
title Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States
title_full Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States
title_fullStr Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States
title_full_unstemmed Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States
title_short Subjective and Real Time: Coding Under Different Drug States
title_sort subjective and real time: coding under different drug states
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4833012/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27087743
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