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Exam Objectives Exam #1 Session #1 (updated 8/26/2011) 1. What is behavioral pharmacology? 2. What is EAB? Discuss some of the features. 3. How does EAB differ from the procedures of traditional psychological research? 4. What is behaviorism? What is the difference between radical and methodological behaviorism? (see text) 5. Discuss some of the events leading up to development of behavioral pharmacology. (Pavlov, Zavadski, Thorndike, Watson, Skinner) 6. Explain and give examples of: a. Behavioral loci of drug action b. Mechanisms that are involved in a drug’s effect(s) c. Behavioral mechanisms of drug action 7. Explain how pole climbing was used as an animal model for screening antipsychotics. 8. Explain the 2 factor theory of avoidance (I will go over this next class) 9. Explain and give examples of the following a. Mult b. Mix c. Chain d. Tandem e. DRL (full session and IRT-based) f. DRH g. Conc h. All simple schedules (ratio, interval, and time) 10. What is an operant? Give an example. 11. There 4 factors that contributed to the rapid development of behavioral pharmacology. Talk about them. 12. Give an example of respondent conditioning. What response measure(s) is (are) used in respondent conditioning? 13. Know the terms from Session 1 on the database (see attached). 14. Explain Skinner and Heron’s study on the effects of caffeine on responding under an FI 4’ schedule of access to food. 15. What are the 4 basic facts about drugs? Session #2 (updated 9/2/2011) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. What are the 4 ways of naming drugs? Be able to give examples. What are 3 ways of classifying drugs? Explain the 4 stages of pharmacokinetics. Draw the route of administration graph that includes IP administration. What is protein and depot binding? 6. What are 3 kinds of kinds of tolerance? 7. Explain linear (1st order) and nonlinear (0 order) kinetics. What is a T ½? Give an example. 8. Given some data, draw a dose response curve with a continuous measure. 9. Given some data, draw a dose response curve with a binary measure. 10. Be able to calculate and interpret a TI. Given a graph, interpret ED and LD data. 11. Explain with examples physical dependence and the withdrawal syndrome. Why does the WD syndrome occur? 12. What is peak efficacy? Potency? 13. Show a graph that demonstrates peak efficacy and potency differences between 2 drugs. 14. What is psychoactive? Psychotropic? 15. Describe the 3 kinds of interactions. Session #3 (updated 9/9/2011) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Diagram the different parts of the nervous system. Be able to diagram a neuron, complete with ions (NA, CL, K, A, CA). Explain how a neuron works, and include action vs resting potential. Discuss some different kinds of neurotransmitters, and the lock and key analogy. Discuss the 6 ways drugs can affect neurotransmission/neuronal activity. What is the source of nicotine? Profile nicotine with the following: a. Routes of administration and absorption b. Distribution c. Biotransformation d. Excretion e. What is the T 1/2 8. Know some of the various effects of nicotine. 9. What is the Nesbitt paradox? How might you explain it? 10. Explain the withdrawal syndrome with nicotine. 11. Discuss 3 theories of nicotine self administration. 12. Discuss the nicotine replacements. 13. Know what neurotransmitters are affected by nicotine administration, and what the biphasic effect is. 14. What is the effect of nicotine on performance? 15. Know some of the health problem sequellae of nicotine use. 16. Explain why Zyban is used in the treatment of excess cigarette smoking. 17. Discuss the difference between excitatory and inhibitory synapses (see page 57-58 in McKim). 18. What is Chantix? How does it work? 19. What is an agonist? Antagonist? Partial agonist? 20. Explain what Zyban is, and why it might be important in reducing smoking. 21. What is a “black box warning?” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_box_warning Exam 2 Session #5 (updated Oct 1, 2011) 1. Draw an operant chamber. (see book or website) 2. Know the following about stimulants: a. Kinds (natural vs synthetic) b. Sources c. Typical routes of administration d. Distribution e. Excretion f. T ½ for cocaine vs amphetamines g. What NTs are affected (include why cocaine has been used as a local anesthetic). h. Tolerance (both acute and chronic) i. W/D syndrome 3. Relate high dose, chronic administrations of amphetamine to psychosis. 4. Describe the effects of the stimulants on: a. Liver b. Nasal passages c. Heart & BP d. Blood vessels e. Performance 5. What are some Txs for addiction to these kind of stimulants? (see book) 6. What is the cocaine sudden death syndrome? 7. What is punding? 8. Explain the clock test of vigilance. 9. Describe the procedures in the following assays: a. Reaction time b. Schedule-controlled behavior c. FCN and FCN-SD d. Repeated acquisition e. DMTS f. Drug discrimination g. Test for analgesic properties 10. Monoamines 11. Catecholamines 12. Know a couple drugs used to treat ADHD. Which kinds are used first? 13. Be able to design an experiment to demonstrate that a drug administration is a positive reinforcer. 14. What is the difference between an acute study, and a chronic study, of drug effects? Be able to draw a dose-response graph of each. Session 6 (updated 10/7/2011) 1. Know the following about alcohol: a. Fermentation b. Distillation c. Typical routes of administration d. Locus of absorption e. Where distributed f. How metabolized (include 1st pass) g. Excretion h. How the drug works on neurons and neurotransmitters. i. How tolerance develops (metabolic, compensatory, behavioral) j. W/D syndrome 2. Know the effects on: a. Body b. Perception c. Performance d. CNS (see Wernicke-Korsakoff) e. Liver f. Offspring (see FAS) g. Heart h. Immune system 3. Explain how disulfiram works to weaken alcohol use. 4. Explain the anti-punishment effects that alcohol has. 5. Explain the efforts to ban alcohol sales in this country (i.e., Prohibition) and the results. When did this era end? 6. Explain some of the various hypotheses about the causes of alcoholism. What are some treatments that are linked to each hypothesis? 7. What is the TI of alcohol, and why this is a problem? 8. Check out the use of the term “priming” in this chapter. Give an example of the use of this procedure with reinforcers other than alcohol. Explain the behavioral mechanism for why it might work. 9. In the priming explanation of alcohol, what behavioral mechanism might be involved in that effect? 10. What is “Oriental flushing?” 11. Caligula! Explain why some of Romans showed signs of psychosis? 12. Be able to explain the compensatory reaction explanation of tolerance. 13. What is polydipsia? How might it be used to study self administration of alcohol? 14. Explain the theory of SIB that involves the release of endorphins. Then, explain the treatment and why it might work. What behavioral process might be involved if the treatment is successful? 15. Be able to design an experiment that demonstrates behavioral tolerance. Session #7 (updated 10/15/2011) 1. Know the following about caffeine a. How administered & where it is absorbed b. Distribution c. T ½ d. Why the T ½ is lower in adults than newborns. e. How excreted f. What NTs are affected, and the role of Adenosine. g. How tolerance develops h. The w/d syndrome and how long it lasts i. The effects on benzodiazepine receptors in the body. j. Effects on performance, blood vessels (brain and periphery), sports activities 2. What are “turkey”drugs? Give an example. 3. What is caffeinism? 4. What are some measures in human behavioral pharmacology? 5. What are some limitations of doing drug studies with humans? 6. Discuss the repeated acquisition study in which the researchers investigated the effects of alcohol and cocaine. 7. Set up a study using the titrating DMTS procedure. Be prepared to explain the study that used it. 8. Explain the difference between single access and choice procedures in assaying the reinforcing efficacy of 2 drugs or 2 doses of a drug (Kelley et al). Be able to setup a study that does so. Which is a more sensitive assessment? 9. Setup a study that uses a PR schedule to study the relative reinforcing efficacy of two or more drugs, or two or more doses of a single drug. 10. What is the major health risk of Mellaril? See: www.pharma.us.novartis.com/product/pi/pdf/Mellaril.pdf 11. Overall, what are the health risks of caffeine consumption? Include risks to bone density. 12. 3 kinds of methylxanthines and their sources. 13. Give examples of drugs functioning as motivational operations. Be able to describe the study from the book that demonstrated the EO effects of damphetamine on social stimuli. 14. What is the author’s point about organizations such as ILSI? 15. What is the difference between a real experiment and a correlational study? (use a between-subject design to explain the answer) 16. Explain the Geller/Seifter procedure and what it is used for. Exam 3 Session 9 (Updated 10/29/2011) 1. Give examples of the drugs that have the following functions: a. US b. CS c. SD d. MO – both establishing and abolishing e. Positive reinforcer f. Negative reinforcer g. Positive punisher 2. What is state-dependent learning? Give an example. 3. What is the matching equation? Apply it to treating opiate addiction. 4. Discuss the source of natural opiates and its derivatives. Also know a couple of synthetics, especially the prescribed drugs. 5. Explain the following for opiates: a. Route of administration b. Absorption c. Distribution d. Excretion e. T ½ f. Why methadone is used in maintenance therapy g. Mechanism of action h. Site of action i. Health risks 6. Explain the fact that some opiates have different affinities for, and effects on, the opiate receptors. 7. What is a mixed antagonist/agonist? Antagonist? Agonist? 8. What are some effects of opiates on the body and physiology? 9. Discuss the w/d syndrome that follows abrupt termination of an opiate. 10. Explain the tolerance process, and whether all effects diminish with chronic use. 11. Explain the British System. Be prepared to comment on how this differs from our system, whether it has some advantages or disadvantages. 12. Talk about methadone maintenance, and how it works. 13. What is LAAM? 14. How are antagonists drugs used in treating addiction? What precedes the use of these drugs? 15. Discuss a procedure that will demonstrate if a drug functions as a negative reinforcer. 16. Explain Siegel’s theory of morphine tolerance. Session 10 (updated 11/4/2011) 1. What is conditioned suppression? Give the experimental procedure and an applied example. Be able to design an experiment that studies the effects of a drug on conditioned suppression. 2. What is the difference between anxiolytics and sedative-hypnotics in terms of how long they last and how fast they have their effects? How are they used? 3. Know the following about the anxiolytics: a. Route of administration b. Absorption c. Distribution d. Metabolism e. Excretion (the biphasic excretion phenomenon) f. Effects of alcohol consumption on benzodiazepines. 4. Explain how the benzodiazepines and barbiturates affect the GABA ionophore. Why are fatalities from the former very unusual? 5. Do the benzodiazepines produce tolerance? 6. Effects of benzodiazepines. 7. What is the W/D syndrome of the benzodiazepines? 8. What are the Z drugs? What are they used for? 9. What is Rohypnol? 10. What are the 2 kinds of psychoses? Name some characteristics of schizophrenia. 11. Talk about the 2 kinds of anti-psychotics and the kind of side effect profile for each. Be able to name a couple of drugs in each class. 12. Know the following about anti-psychotics: b. Absorption/Administration c. Distribution d. Metabolism e. Excretion f. T½ g. TI 13. What are the 2 dopamine systems? 14. Using the 2 dopamine systems, discuss why the typical anti-psychotics have more motor side effects than the atypicals. 15. Know the following about antipsychotics: a. Tolerance? b. W/D ? c. Subjective effects d. Abuse potential e. Effects on sexual activity - think about what kind of behavior problems might obtain 16. Kinds of EPS 17. What are some other uses for the anti-psychotics. 18. Iatrogenic! 19. Teratogen 20. Cross tolerance Session#11 (Updated 11/15/2011 – just work on the questions that are starred******) 1. What is the relationship between a drug effect and the degree of stimulus control over behavior? (i.e., is behavior more likely, or less likely, to be disrupted by a drug if it is strongly controlled by a stimulus?) 2. Describe some pharmacological variables that might influence drug effects.****** 3. Describe some personal variables that might influence drug effects.****** 4. Give an example drug effects that depend on the type of antecedent stimuli that are used. 5. Describe an example of behavioral tolerance. 6. Give an example of drug effects that depend on the response form being studied. 7. Give an example of a drug effect that depends on the consequence. 8. What is a rate dependent effect? Give an example. 9. Describe the procedure and results of the study by Hughes et al. Note the use of rules in this study. 10. What are the 1st generation and 2nd generation anti-depressants? 11. Provide some characteristics of major depression. ******* 12. What are some causes of depression? 13. What is mania? Bipolar? 14. What are drugs prescribed for mania, and for bipolar? 15. What is the monoamine theory of depression? 16. What is the SE view of depression? ******** 17. What is the neurogenesis theory of depression? What is the apparent effect of stress on the size of the hippocampus? 18. What are some factors that enhance neurogenesis? Interfere with neurogenesis? 19. Know in general how the MAOIs, TCAs, and SSRIs ***** (just the SSRIs) work. 20. Know, in general, the fate of the antidepressants. 21. The author discusses the reason why anti-depressants take 2 weeks to act, despite the fact that the effect on the MA is immediate. What is the current explanation that involve autoreceptors? What about the explanation that appeals to neurogenesis? 22. With respect to the MAOIs, what is orthostatic hypotension? What is the deal with tyrosine? 23. What is the serotonin syndrome? 24. What is the dangerous side effect of the TCAs? 25. Serendipity! 26. Be able to design an experiment that demonstrates whether or not a schedule of reinforcement (or, perhaps, stimuli associated with it) has “aversive” properties (and use aversive as functioning as a negative reinforcer). Final Objectives (updated 12/3/2011) 1. Using the drug table, be able to profile the drug classes. Include 2 commonly used drugs, effects, w/d syndrome, how the drugs work (i.e., what NTs are affected), and interesting information from the last column (Treatment/Pertinent information) 2. Be able to describe the following procedures: a. Repeated acquisition b. DMTS c. FCN d. Reaction time e. Schedule controlled behavior f. Test of analgesia 3. What are the 4 stages of pharmacokinetics? Use a drug class to explain this. 4. What are the 3 kinds of drug interactions? (super, additive, infra) 5. What is the difference between 1st order and 0 order kinetics? 6. What are the 4 basic facts about drugs? 7. Draw the route of administration graph that shows blood levels as a function of route. 8. Draw a dose response curve. 9. What is TI, ED, and LD? 10. Explain how a neuron works. Use a diagram. 11. Examples of drugs that have the following effects: a. US b. SD c. MO d. Positive reinforcer e. Negative reinforcer f. Positive punisher 12. State dependent learning 13. Describe some of the pharmacological variables and personal characteristics that can influence a drug effect. 14. Give an example of how a drug’s effect might depend on: a. The kind of antecedent stimulus used b. The response topography studied c. The consequence maintaining the behavior under study 15. What are the 3 kinds of tolerance? 16. EPS – discuss some kinds 17. NT theories of depression and psychosis, and how drugs affect these conditions. 18. Neurogenic theory of depression 19. Matching law and predictions therefrom. 20. Explain some treatment options for drug abuse (recall also the use of antagonists and antagonist/agonist options from the opiate section) that are linked to the function of drug consumption. 21. Be able to design a chronic or acute study that investigates drug effects. 22. Peak efficacy and potency 23. 3 models of drug abuse and what treatment options follow from each. Include some variables that explain drug use in the behavioral model. 24. What are at least 2 ways of assaying the reinforcing value of a drug? 25. Siegel’s theory of morphine tolerance. Be able to diagram it to explain tolerance. 26. 5 ways that drugs can affect neurotransmission 27. Endorphin theory of SIB and resulting treatment thereof. 28. 2 general kinds of seizures, and 1 example/description of each. 29. In addition to meds, describe another 3 treatments for seizures. 30. Describe the difference between a within-subject and between-subject study. 31. What is rate dependent drug effects? 32. What is priming? 33. What are the Z drugs? For what are they used? 34. Know the following about steroids a. What are anabolic steroids? b. What are some immediate effects of using anabolic steroids? c. What are the long-term health sequellae of using anabolic steroids? d. What are corticoid steroids? e. What are the sex hormones (male & female)? f. Difference between androgenic and anabolic? 35. What is behavioral pharmacology? 36. Be able to design an applied study of a drug effect on some problem behavior, or some appropriate behavior (attend to the 4 elements of a clinical drug assessment). 37. Be able to draw a dose response curve with some hypothetical data. 38. Explain the following: a. Agonist b. Antagonist c. Mixed agonist/antagonist 39. Serendipty! Caligula!