Keyword search (4,165 papers available)

"goal" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Developmental heterogeneity of school burnout across the transition from upper secondary school to higher education: A 9-year follow-up study Nadon L; Morin AJS; Gilbert W; Olivier E; Salmela-Aro K; 39645324
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Achievement Goals as Mediators of the Links Between Self-Esteem and Depressive Symptoms From Mid-Adolescence to Early Adulthood Gilbert W; Eltanoukhi R; Morin AJS; Salmela-Aro K; 38963580
PSYCHOLOGY
3 The interpersonal benefits of goal adjustment capacities: the sample case of coping with poor sleep in couples Meaghan A Barlow 38566936
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Control strategies for managing health threats in older adults Wrosch C; Heckhausen J; 38039949
PSYCHOLOGY
5 The priming effect of rewarding brain stimulation in rats depends on both the cost and strength of reward but survives blockade of D2-like dopamine receptors Czarina Evangelista 37752810
CSBN
6 A longitudinal person-centered representation of elementary students' motivation: Do perceptions of parent and teacher achievement goals matter? Nadon L; Morin AJS; Olivier E; Archambault I; Smodis McCune V; Tóth-Király I; 37689436
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Resource efficiency analysis through planetary boundary-based life cycle assessment: a case study of sugarcane in Pakistan Ghani HU; Ryberg M; Bjørn A; Hauschild MZ; Gheewala SH; 37363084
ENCS
8 Green building standards and the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals Goubran S; Walker T; Cucuzzella C; Schwartz T; 36372039
ENCS
9 The role of context on responding to an alcohol-predictive cue in female and male rats Segal D; Valyear MD; Chaudhri N; 34742865
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Ice Hockey Goaltender Physiology Profile and Physical Testing: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Marcotte-L' heureux V; Charron J; Panenic R; Comtois AS; 34567379
HKAP
11 Effects of Goal Appraisals and Goal Motivation on Dimensions of Identity Development: A Longitudinal Mixed Methods Analysis of European American Emerging Adults Mulvihill K; Hortop EG; Guilmette M; Barker ET; Putnick DL; Bornstein MH; 34335001
PSYCHOLOGY
12 Context controls the timing of responses to an alcohol-predictive conditioned stimulus. Valyear MD, Chaudhri N 32017964
PSYCHOLOGY
13 Why Are We Together? A Dyadic Longitudinal Investigation of Relationship Motivation, Goal Progress and Adjustment. Holding A, Barlow M, Koestner R, Wrosch C 31420868
PSYCHOLOGY
14 Agency and Motivation in Adulthood and Old Age. Heckhausen J, Wrosch C, Schulz R 30110574
PSYCHOLOGY
15 The effects of exercise on cognition and gait in Parkinson's disease: A scoping review. Intzandt B, Beck EN, Silveira CRA 30291852
PERFORM

 

Title:The role of context on responding to an alcohol-predictive cue in female and male rats
Authors:Segal DValyear MDChaudhri N
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34742865/
DOI:10.1016/j.alcohol.2021.10.004
Publication:Alcohol (Fayetteville, N.Y.)
Keywords:AlcoholContextGoal-trackingPavlovian conditioningRatSex differences
PMID:34742865 Category: Date Added:2021-11-08
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada. Electronic address: milan.valyear@mcgill.ca.

Description:

In male rats, physical contexts that are associated with alcohol can amplify responding to a discrete, alcohol-predictive conditioned stimulus (CS), and amplify prime-induced reinstatement. Here, we examined these effects as a function of biological sex. Male and female Long-Evans rats were acclimated to drinking ethanol (15% v/v) in their home cages. Next, they were trained to associate an auditory CS (10 s; white noise or clicker; 15 trials per session) with ethanol delivery (0.2 ml per CS; 3.0 ml per session) into a fluid port for oral intake. Training occurred in a distinctive context containing specific visual, olfactory, and tactile stimuli. During alternating sessions rats were exposed to a second context wherein they did not receive ethanol. At test, CS trials occurred in both contexts without ethanol delivery. Rats then underwent extinction using repeated unreinforced presentations of the CS in both contexts. An alcohol-primed reinstatement test was then conducted, in which 0.2 ml of ethanol was presented at the start of the session and during the first CS trial, after which no ethanol was delivered for the remainder of the session. At both test and reinstatement, male rats made significantly more CS port-entries in the context associated with alcohol delivery than in the context in which alcohol was never experienced. Unlike males, female rats made a similar number of CS port-entries at test in both the alcohol context and the neutral context. The reinstatement observed in female rats was also not affected by context. These findings suggest that the capacity of an alcohol-associated context to modulate responding to a discrete, alcohol-predictive cue is less pronounced in female than male rats.





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