scholarly journals An Exploration of Responses to Drug Conditioned Stimuli during Treatment for Substance Dependence

2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Goddard ◽  
Leanne S. Son Hing ◽  
Francesco Leri

Although it is well established that drug conditioned stimuli produce a variety of conditioned responses, it is not known whether such stimuli can also reinforce an arbitrary operant response and thus serve as conditioned reinforcers. Volunteers (n=39) recruited from a residential treatment center for substance dependence were tested on a task in which presses on computer keys activated images of drugs/drug paraphernalia on a progressive ratio schedule of reinforcement. They also completed a personalized craving questionnaire and a personalized Implicit Association Test. A significant bias in responding was found for images of preferred drugs/route of drug administration. Craving, however, was low and the images generated negative evaluative reactions. Two additional studies were performed to ascertain the generalizability of the effects to a different population of drug-using individuals (i.e., students who drink) and to incentive stimuli of a different nature (i.e., sexual). The additional studies partially replicated and extended the central findings of the main study. Therefore, although these data should be considered preliminary in light of small group sizes, it is concluded that cue specificity and availability of the unconditioned stimuli (drugs and sex) plays a role in modulating responding maintained by conditioned reinforcers.

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron P. Blaisdell ◽  
Matthew Yan Lam Lau ◽  
Cynthia Fast ◽  
Katie Telminova ◽  
Boyang Fan ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Lane Williams ◽  
Christopher C Conway

Clinically significant fears and phobias can be acquired vicariously. Witnessing a demonstrator’s defensive reaction to potentially dangerous objects and situations can instill conditioned threat responses in the observer. The present study concentrates on individual differences in this social learning process. Specifically, we hypothesized that dispositional empathy modulates vicarious threat conditioning. We examined university students’ (N = 150) conditioned threat responding after they observed strangers undergo Pavlovian threat conditioning. There was evidence of a substantial conditioned defensive response (Cohen’s d = 0.66), as indexed by elevated skin conductance reactions during participants’ direct exposure to the vicariously conditioned stimuli. Contrary to expectations, indices of dispositional empathy were weakly related to the size of conditioned responses (median r = .04). Our results confirm that vicarious threat learning can be evaluated experimentally, but they do not support the hypothesis that empathy amplifies this process. The preregistration, stimulus materials, data, and analysis code for this study are available at https://osf.io/h6hm2.


Author(s):  
Craige C. Wrenn ◽  
Eric French ◽  
Dustin Baker ◽  
Randall McCallian ◽  
Ryan Kirk ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 167 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.-Y. Ho ◽  
S. Body ◽  
S. Kheramin ◽  
C. M. Bradshaw ◽  
E. Szabadi

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