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Journal Article

Citation

Spiga R, Bennett RH, Cherek DR, Grabowski J. Drug Alcohol Depend. 1994; 34(2): 139-147.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Texas Medical School-Houston, University of Texas-Houston Health Science Center 77030.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8026301

Abstract

The effects of ethanol (0.5, 0.75 and 1.00 g/kg) on human cooperative behavior were examined. Ethanol or placebo was administered 30 min before the second of five trials. During the first of two alternating schedule components, button presses were maintained by a random interval (RI) 60-s schedule of point additions to a counter marked 'Your Earnings'. During the second, Choice, component a concurrent RI 60-s schedule maintained button presses on two manipulanda. Subjects randomly assigned to the social group were instructed that they were paired with another person and could earn points working with or independently of this person. Working together, the cooperative response, simultaneously produced points on counters marked 'Other's Earnings' and 'Your Earnings'. Working independently, the independent response produced points only on the counter marked 'Your Earnings'. The other person was fictitious. The instructions for the non-social group did not mention another subject and the counter marked 'Other's Earnings' was not visible but schedule contingencies were identical to those for the social instruction group. For the social instructions group, 1.00 g/kg ethanol increased the proportion of cooperative responses and time allocated the cooperative option. For the non-social instruction group, time allocated to the topographically identical but non-social equivalent of the cooperative response decreased at the same dose. No significant between-group effects were observed following acute administration of 0.50 and 0.75 g/kg ethanol. These results suggest that the instructions established a functionally distinct social, cooperative, response which was differentially affected by ethanol.


Language: en

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