Rats learned one of two appetitive discrimination tasks varying in terms of cognitive difficulty. Contrary to previous reports showing an impairment in the acquisition of avoidance tasks under the effects of either chlorpromazine (CPZ) or lithium, the results of this experiment indicate that neither drug retards the acquisition of appetitive tasks. Instead, at the highest doses used (2 and 3 mg/kg), CPZ decreased the number of trials required for the difficult task. Rats administered CPZ had longer reaction times than rats administered placebo, and therefore might have achieved criterion earlier because they spent more time in front of and on the discriminanda. The contrary results reported with avoidance tests concerning the effects of CPZ are explained in terms of the anxiety-reducing properties of CPZ, which might reduce drive without impairing cognitive ability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00432548 | DOI Listing |
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