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The state of the reward comparison hypothesis: Theoretical comment on Huang and Hsiao (2008).
Authors:Grigson  Patricia Sue
Abstract:Rats avoid intake of a gustatory cue following pairings with a drug of abuse, such as morphine or cocaine. Despite the well-established rewarding properties of these drugs, the reduction in intake of the taste cue has been interpreted as a conditioned taste aversion for decades. In 1997, I proposed the reward comparison hypothesis suggesting that rats avoided intake of the drug-associated taste cue because the value of the taste cue pales in comparison to the highly rewarding drug of abuse expected in the near future. In this issue of Behavioral Neuroscience, A. C. W. Huang and S. Hsiao (see record 2008-17011-002) challenge the reward comparison hypothesis by showing parallels between amphetamine and LiCl-induced suppression of CS intake. This commentary addresses the current state of the reward comparison hypothesis in the context of the experiments completed by Huang and Hsiao and their new task-dependent drug effects hypothesis. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:anticipatory contrast  sucrose  cocaine  withdrawal  self-administration  rats  conditioned taste aversion  reward comparison  task-dependent drug effects  LiCl  amphetamine  lithium chloride
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