On 2014 Jul 25, Serge Ahmed commented:
Thanks for your comments on my previous comments which, contrary to what you claim, were not based on “incorrect assumptions”. I leave the readers to judge for themselves. Here I just want to persist and sign for the sake of clarification. There is no solid evidence for compulsive cocaine use in your study. Mice gave up easily on cocaine and this apparently, I now learn from your comments, regardless of strain differences. I agree that your study was not designed to directly compare the motivation for food with that for cocaine. But still it shows that mice are able to produce hundreds of responses to obtain certain rewards of importance to them. The fact that mice are able to but do not expand a comparable level of effort to obtain cocaine shows that they are not that motivated for cocaine. More specifically, it shows that even after several weeks of cocaine intake, the motivation for cocaine fails to acquire a degree of intensity that approaches that for food in hungry mice. This is perhaps one of the reasons why mice were trained on a FR1 for cocaine in your study and not on a FR10 like for food. Finally, your operational measure of “perseverative responding” is difficult to interpret because the introduction of the drug-off periods also considerably influences cocaine self-administration during the drug-on periods. Judging from Figure 1, cocaine self-administration rapidly becomes very irregular, with short and long inter-injection intervals. As a result, some of the inter-injection intervals during the drug-on periods are much longer than the drug-off periods themselves, making behavior during the latter periods quite difficult to interpret!
This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.