TY - JOUR T1 - Effects of opioids on accuracy of a fixed-ratio discrimination in monkeys and rats. JF - Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics JO - J Pharmacol Exp Ther SP - 541 LP - 549 VL - 230 IS - 3 AU - J M Moerschbaecher AU - J Mastropaolo AU - P J Winsauer AU - D M Thompson Y1 - 1984/09/01 UR - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/230/3/541.abstract N2 - In the presence of a stimulus above the center lever, monkeys and rats were required to complete one of two fixed-ratios (FRs) on the center lever (FR20 or FR40, monkeys; FR8 or FR16, rats). Completion of the ratio turned off the center-lever stimulus and produced a stimulus above each of the two side levers. If the completed ratio was high (e.g., FR40), a response on the left lever produced a food pellet. If the ratio was low (e.g., FR20) a response on the right lever produced food. Errors produced a brief timeout. In monkeys, d-SKF 10,047 either increased slightly or had no effect on response rate on the center lever, whereas increasing errors in a dose-related manner. In rats, both dl-SKF 10,047 and cyclazocine were found to produce a dose-related decrease in response rate and an increase in errors. The putative kappa agonist ethylketocyclazocine produced similar effects in both the monkey and rat. At doses that decreased rate of responding, accuracy was unaffected, except at the highest dose that virtually eliminated responding. Unlike any of the other drugs tested, ethylketocyclazocine decreased rate by producing a dose-related pause at the start of the session rather than by altering the local rates of responding. In monkeys, the mu agonists morphine and methadone produced dose-related decreases in response rate, primarily due to sporadic pausing. Across this same range of doses neither drug affected errors, except at the high doses in which relatively small increases obtained.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) ER -