Discriminative properties of d-amphetamine in gerbils : tests for the drug generalization and antagonism.

Author(s)
Järbe, T.U.C. & Kroon, E.
Year
Abstract

By drug discrimination is meant that animals are trained to perform equivalent, though incompatible differential responses on the sole basis of being drugged or non-drugged. Gerbils were trained to discriminate d-amphetamine from the nondrug condition using 2 discriminative two-choice tasks. The results are presented and discussed.

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Publication

Library number
B 12546 /83.4/
Source

Uppsala, University of Uppsala, Department of Psychology, 1977, 15 p., graph., ref.; Report No. 223.

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