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Introduction to Behavioral Pharmacology. Defining Behavioral Pharmacology. Behavioral Pharmacology is a specialization of behavioral science that applies the methods and concepts of behavior analysis to explain the behavioral effects of drugs.
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Defining Behavioral Pharmacology • Behavioral Pharmacology is a specialization of behavioral science that applies the methods and concepts of behavior analysis to explain the behavioral effects of drugs. • Behavior Analysis is a unique natural science approach to study behavior • Popularized by B.F. Skinner
Defining Behavioral Pharmacology • Psychopharmacology vs. Behavioral Pharmacology • The distinction is not always clear. • The term “psychopharmacology” was coined a few decades before the science of behavior analysis was developed. • Some people distinguish these specializations based on the accepted methodology to study drug effects. (i.e., a broader range of methods in psychopharmacology.) • Others distinguish them based on emphasis of research questions. • Others don’t distinguish them at all.
Science of Behavior Analysis • Environmental events are emphasized because: • such variables clearly influence behavior • they are directly observable • we have the technology to study them • they are subject to direct manipulation
Behavior Analysis • What it is: • a natural science emphasizing effects of environmental variables on behavior • concerned with behavior in its own right, not as an indication of events at another level of analysis • a proven practical approach to deal with a wide variety of behavioral problems (including drug use and abuse)
Behavior Analysis • What it is NOT: • S-R psychology • unconcerned with mental events (thoughts, emotions) • unconcerned with genetics, physiology • dead
Behaviorism in the Early 20th Century • Ivan Pavlov • Respondent conditioning • Some of Pavlov’s early work examined drug effects on respondent conditioning. • This work preceded the formal development of Behavioral Pharmacology. • John Watson • Introduced Behaviorism • First to put forth a strong natural science approach for psychology • Attempted to explain behavior primarily in terms of respondent conditioning • Methodological Behaviorism (deals only with publicly observable events)
Radical Behaviorism • Philosophical Position Adopted and Promoted by B.F. Skinner • conceptualizes behavior as involving both public and private events • assigns no special status to private events • Private events (e.g., thoughts, feelings) do not cause overt behavior: • they are stimuli that function similar to directly observable stimuli • they are difficult to study
Science of Behavior Analysis • Emphasizes • Antecedents, Responses, Consequences • Contingencies of Reinforcement • Operant Behavior • behavior modified by its consequences • Operant Conditioning • the process of modifying some characteristic of behavior by altering its consequences
Experimental Analysis of Behavior • Essential features of EAB Research • JEAB (founded in 1958) continues to be an important outlet for EAB research
Uses of EAB in Behavioral Pharmacology • Main Assumptions • Behavior is important in its own right. • An intensive study of a few subjects is a fruitful research strategy. • Graphic analysis of data is desirable. • Direct and repeated measures are invaluable. • Variable data are best dealt with by isolating and controlling responsible extraneous variables. • Studies of nonhuman subjects under controlled experimental conditions can be of great value to understand variables that control human behavior.
Research Areas in Behavioral Pharmacology • Behavioral Loci • what aspects of behavior are altered by the drug (e.g., reaction time) • Behavioral Mechanisms of Action • the stimulus functions of the drug; the effects of the drug on the capacity of other stimuli to control behavior • Variables that Modulate Drug’s Behavioral Effects • e.g., other stimuli, alternative reinforcers etc…