Unpredictable, intermittent access to sucrose or water promotes increased reward pursuit in rats

Behav Brain Res. 2023 Sep 13:453:114612. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2023.114612. Epub 2023 Aug 4.

Abstract

Reward uncertainty can sensitize reward pathways, promoting increased reward-seeking and -taking behaviours. This is relevant to human conditions such as pathological gambling, eating disorders and drug addiction. In the context of addiction, preclinical self-administration procedures have been developed to model the intermittency of human drug use. These intermittent-access (IntA) procedures involve intermittent but predictable access to drug during self-administration sessions. However, human drug use typically involves intermittent and unpredictable drug access. We introduce a new procedure modeling unpredictable, intermittent access (UIntA) to a reinforcer, and we compare it to procedures that provide predictable reinforcer availability; continuous (ContA) or intermittent (IntA) access. Female rats self-administered water or liquid sucrose in daily hour-long sessions. IntA and ContA rats had access to a fixed volume of water or sucrose (0.1 ml), under a fixed ratio 3 schedule of reinforcement. IntA rats had predictable 5-min reinforcer ON and 25-min reinforcer OFF periods. ContA rats had 60 min of reinforcer access during each session. For UIntA rats, variation in the length of ON and OFF periods (1, 5 or 9 min/period), response requirement (variable ratio 3 schedule of reinforcement), reinforcer probability (50%) and quantity (0, 0.1 or 0.2 ml) introduced reward uncertainty. Following 14 daily self-administration sessions, UIntA rats showed the highest levels of responding for water or sucrose under progressive ratio conditions, responding under extinction conditions, and cue-induced reinstatement of sucrose seeking. Thus, unpredictable, intermittent reward access promotes increased reward pursuit. This has implications for modeling addiction and other disorders of increased reward seeking.

Keywords: Incentive salience; Intermittent access; Motivation; Reward; Self-Administration; Uncertainty.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Female
  • Gambling*
  • Humans
  • Rats
  • Reinforcement, Psychology
  • Reward
  • Self Administration
  • Sucrose* / pharmacology
  • Water

Substances

  • Sucrose
  • Water