scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P2093 | author name string | Michael T Bardo | |
Joshua S Beckmann | |||
Julie A Marusich | |||
Cassandra D Gipson | |||
P2860 | cites work | Neural systems of reinforcement for drug addiction: from actions to habits to compulsion | Q29547251 |
Drug addiction, dysregulation of reward, and allostasis | Q29616741 | ||
The debate over dopamine's role in reward: the case for incentive salience | Q29618738 | ||
Drug-induced plasticity contributing to heightened relapse susceptibility: neurochemical changes and augmented reinstatement in high-intake rats | Q33660418 | ||
Review. The incentive sensitization theory of addiction: some current issues | Q34798207 | ||
Emergence of context-associated GluR(1) and ERK phosphorylation in the nucleus accumbens core during withdrawal from cocaine self-administration | Q35046610 | ||
Effect of environmental enrichment on escalation of cocaine self-administration in rats | Q35194957 | ||
Neurobiological mechanisms in the transition from drug use to drug dependence. | Q35690527 | ||
How to make a rat addicted to cocaine | Q36274831 | ||
Escalation of food-maintained responding and sensitivity to the locomotor stimulant effects of cocaine in mice | Q36469706 | ||
Cellular neuroadaptations to chronic opioids: tolerance, withdrawal and addiction | Q36741881 | ||
Explaining the escalation of drug use in substance dependence: models and appropriate animal laboratory tests | Q36850061 | ||
Drug addiction as a pathology of staged neuroplasticity | Q36931620 | ||
Behavioral economic assessment of price and cocaine consumption following self-administration histories that produce escalation of either final ratios or intake | Q37060495 | ||
Methylphenidate as a reinforcer for rats: contingent delivery and intake escalation | Q38274000 | ||
Extended access to amphetamine self-administration increases impulsive choice in a delay discounting task in rats | Q38274873 | ||
Transition from moderate to excessive drug intake: change in hedonic set point. | Q42539135 | ||
Patterns of cocaine self-administration in rats produced by various access conditions under a discrete trials procedure | Q44070875 | ||
Escalation of cocaine self-administration does not depend on altered cocaine-induced nucleus accumbens dopamine levels. | Q44478498 | ||
Increased motivation for self-administered cocaine after escalated cocaine intake | Q44661037 | ||
Changes in response to a dopamine receptor antagonist in rats with escalating cocaine intake. | Q44675340 | ||
Transition to drug addiction: a negative reinforcement model based on an allostatic decrease in reward function | Q45283043 | ||
Sex differences in the escalation of oral phencyclidine (PCP) self-administration under FR and PR schedules in rhesus monkeys | Q45288310 | ||
Dissociation of psychomotor sensitization from compulsive cocaine consumption | Q46611102 | ||
Neural and behavioral plasticity associated with the transition from controlled to escalated cocaine use. | Q46648657 | ||
Satiety threshold: a quantitative model of maintained cocaine self-administration | Q48115208 | ||
Effects of dose and session duration on cocaine self-administration in rats | Q48631930 | ||
Long-lasting increase in the set point for cocaine self-administration after escalation in rats | Q50140982 | ||
Cocaine self-administration "binges": transition from behavioral and autonomic regulation toward homeostatic dysregulation in rats. | Q51368223 | ||
The effects of dose and access restrictions on the periodicity of cocaine self-administration in the rat. | Q51657117 | ||
Escalation of methamphetamine self-administration in rats: a dose-effect function. | Q52022759 | ||
Scalar timing in memory. | Q52093400 | ||
Morphine analgesic tolerance: its situation specificity supports a Pavlovian conditioning model | Q52308833 | ||
Persistent increase in the motivation to take heroin in rats with a history of drug escalation | Q73505941 | ||
P433 | issue | 2 | |
P407 | language of work or name | English | Q1860 |
P304 | page(s) | 257-267 | |
P577 | publication date | 2012-01-17 | |
P1433 | published in | Psychopharmacology | Q1422802 |
P1476 | title | Escalation of cocaine intake with extended access in rats: dysregulated addiction or regulated acquisition? | |
P478 | volume | 222 |
Q41896365 | "Mourning" a lost opportunity |
Q48196759 | Chemogenetic inhibition reveals midline thalamic nuclei and thalamo-accumbens projections mediate cocaine-seeking in rats. |
Q46191741 | Contributions of prolonged contingent and non-contingent cocaine exposure to escalation of cocaine intake and glutamatergic gene expression. |
Q48268615 | Differential stimulus control of drug-seeking: multimodal reinstatement |
Q36655694 | Dose and elasticity of demand for self-administered cocaine in rats |
Q35181578 | Escalation of cocaine consumption in short and long access self-administration procedures |
Q36094777 | Escalation of i.v. cocaine intake in peri-adolescent vs. adult rats selectively bred for high (HiS) vs. low (LoS) saccharin intake |
Q41656843 | Less is more: prolonged intermittent access cocaine self-administration produces incentive-sensitization and addiction-like behavior |
Q39262233 | Modulation of drug choice by extended drug access and withdrawal in rhesus monkeys: Implications for negative reinforcement as a driver of addiction and target for medications development |
Q36959660 | Role of the major glutamate transporter GLT1 in nucleus accumbens core versus shell in cue-induced cocaine-seeking behavior |
Q37062547 | The Nucleus Accumbens: Mechanisms of Addiction across Drug Classes Reflect the Importance of Glutamate Homeostasis |
Q50248388 | The Winding Road to Relapse: Forging a New Understanding of Cue-Induced Reinstatement Models and Their Associated Neural Mechanisms |
Q39563244 | The effects of social contact on cocaine intake under extended-access conditions in male rats |
Q91699787 | The influence of sex and estrous cyclicity on cocaine and remifentanil demand in rats |
Q92027288 | The transition to cocaine addiction: the importance of pharmacokinetics for preclinical models |
Q38680773 | Utility of Nonhuman Primates in Substance Use Disorders Research |
Search more.