Neurochemical basis of conditioned partner preference in the female rat: I. Disruption by naloxone.
Behavioral Neuroscience 122(2): 385-395
Article 2008 English
Authors
GC
Genaro A. Coria‐Ávila
CS
Carrie E. Solomon
EV
Erica Barbosa Vargas
Abstract
1 min read
The effects of the opioid antagonist naloxone were examined on the development of conditioned partner preference induced by paced copulation in female rats. In Experiment 1, ovariectomized, hormone-primed rats were conditioned to associate scented and unscented male rats with paced and nonpaced copulation, respectively. Female rats in Experiment 2 associated albino or pigmented male rats with paced or nonpaced copulation. Naloxone or saline was administered before each conditioning trial. During a final drug-free preference test, female rats could choose to copulate with either a pacing related or unrelated male. Saline-trained female rats in the paired group copulated preferentially with the pacing-related male rat, whereas naloxone-trained female rats did not show a preference. The authors concluded that opioids mediated the conditioned partner preference induced by paced copulation.
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