Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior

February 2-6, 2008
Winter Park, Colorado


Main

About the Conference

2008 Program

Past Programs

William A. Roberts , Keynote Speaker

Past Keynote Speakers

Registration & Accommodations

Important Dates

Transportation

2008 Conference Committee

 

 

PAST PROGRAMS

Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior
Winter Park , Colorado
February 3 - 7, 2007

  Saturday, February 3, 2007

7:00pm -- Buffet Reception and Social Hour

8:15pm -- Welcome and Introduction to the Conference

Stan Weiss, Convener

  Workshop I— Programming Med-PC® (60 min)

Presented by Steven I. Dworkin ( University of North Carolina-Wilmington )

Assisted by Karl R. Zurn & Bridget McM Zurn (MED Associates)

Sunday, February 4, 2007 *

4:30pm -- KEYNOTE ADDRESS

Federico Sanabria, Chair

The 3Ms of Analysis:

Minding, Mining and Modeling our Data

Peter Killeen

Arizona State University

At least 3 x 1 0 8 key-pecks and orders more lever-presses were recorded last year, most of which played no role in guiding scientific inferences. Minding : We can maximize benefit/cost of experiments only by understanding their purpose, beyond satisfaction of vagrant curiosity; if we don't mind experimenting, our results won't matter. I propose a goal: Maximizing the mutual information between a model and a data set; between the things we record and what we say about them. I briefly describe indices of GoF. Mining : Thar's gold in them thar hills. But thar's more dirt. I describe 3 approaches to extracting more of the gold, each attending to more molecular measures: Delta Plots, Survivor plots, and Real-Time analyses. Each technique brings sequentially more of the data to bear on what we might want to say about it.

  6pm -- Elimination, Recovery, Patterning & Distribution of Behavior

Carl Danson, Chair

Acute Stress & Spontaneous Recovery after Extinction of Conditioned Responses. Cody Brooks & Alana Rojewski ( Denison University ) (10 min)

Stimulus-Reinforcer Relations and Recovery of Instrumental Responding After Extinction. Chris. Podlesnik & Tim Shahan ( Utah State University ) (10 min)

Recovery of Sign-Tracking in Rats After Response Elimination Through Negative Contingency Training. Dave Kearns & Stan Weiss ( American University ) (10 min)

Positive and Negative Outcomes and Positive and Negative Patterning. Bill Whitlow ( Rutgers University ) (10 min)

Some Thoughts and Some Data on Delay Discounting and Gambling." Greg Madden, Adam Brewer, Patrick Johnson, & Nathaniel Smith ( University of Kansas ) (10 min)

Operant Behavioral Model for Studying Persistent Orofacial Nociception. Gerald Hill, Larry Bellinger, Robert Spears, Bob Hutchins, Carolyn Kerins & Phillip Kramer ( Baylor College of Dentistry ) (Poster)

Monday, February 5, 2007 *

4:30pm -- Focus Session

Cody Brooks & Mark Reilly, Chairs

Modeling Data: From Description & Significance to Behavior & Theories

Superstitious Behavior in Pigeons: The Relation of Concepts and Assumptions on Taking and Analyzing Data. Bill Timberlake ( Indiana University ) (15 min)

Making Every Response Count. Jonathon Crystal ( University of Georgia ) (15 min)

The Choose-Short Effect: Changes in Memory for Sample Duration or Disruption of Attention to Samples? Ryan D. Ward & Amy L. Odum ( Utah State University ) (15 min)

A Three-Component Model of Relational Learning in the Transposition Paradigm. Olga F. Lazareva ( University of Iowa ), Michael E. Young (Southern Illinois University at Carbondale ), & E. A. Wasserman ( University of Iowa ) (15 min)

An Induced Two-Factor Model of Stimulus Control. Stan Weiss ( American University ) (25 min)

Conditioned Reinforcement and Quantitative Models of Behavior Allocation and Persistence. Tim Shahan & Chris Podlesnik ( Utah State University ) (15 min)

A Reinforcement Learning Model of Response Timing in Classical Conditioning. Elliot A. Ludvig (University of Alberta), James Neufeld (University of Alberta), E. James Kehoe (University of New South Wales) & Rich Sutton (University of Alberta) (15 min).

Beyond Efficiency: A Model of DRL with Attention, Activity, Timing, and Impulsivity Modules. Federico Sanabria ( Arizona State University ) (15 min)

8:15pm -- Conference Dinner at Fontanot's

TUESDAY, February 6, 2007

4:30pm -- Drugs & Behavior

Amy Odum, Chair

Unresolved Sodium Appetite Enhances Cocaine-Induced Psychomotor Response. Martin Acerbo ( University of Iowa ) (15 min)

Does Methylphenidate Alter Environmental Familiarization? Amanda Struthers & Rick Bevins (University of Nebraska-Lincoln) (10 min)

Where Oh Where Can the Nicotine Place Preference Be. Jamie Wilkinson & Rick Bevins (University of Nebraska-Lincoln) (10 min)

Relative Resistance to Change of Alcohol-maintained Responding of Rats Depends on Disruptor Type. Corina Jimenez-Gomez & Tim Shahan ( Utah State University ) (10 min)

Extinction/Reinstatement Paradigms as Models of Cocaine-Seeking. Tim Koeltzow ( Bradley University ) (10 min)

Bupropion as a Smoking Cessation Aid: A Novel Account for the Clinical Success and Pre-clinical Confusion. Matt Palmatier, Kara Mays, Kasia Bak, Xiu Liu, Tony Caggiula, Eric Donny, & Alan Sved ( University of Pittsburgh ) (10 min)

6pm --Carry in Dinner Compliments of Karl Zern (Med Associates)

6:45pm -- Workshop 2 —Drug Self-Administration (90 min)

Presented by Steven I. Dworkin ( University of North Carolina-Wilmington )

Assisted by Karl R. Zurn & Bridget McM Zurn (MED Associates)

End 8:15pm

Wednesday, February 7, 2007 -- Check out time is 10am

2007 WCALB Organizing Committee
Stan Weiss, Convener & Program
Rick Bevins, Program
Cody Brooks, Focus Session
Mark Reilly, Focus Session
Bill Timberlake, Program

*Five minutes will be added to the presentation times indicated for questions and discussion

WCALB 2007 Participants

Martin Acerbo <martin-acerbo@uiowa.edu>
Rick Bevins <rbevins1@unl.edu>
Cody Brooks <brooksc@denison.edu>
Jonathon D. Crystal <jcrystal@uga.edu>
Carl Danson <cedanson2@mac.com>
Steve Dworkin <dworkins@uncw.edu>
Gerald Hill < ghill@bcd.tamhsc.edu >
Corina Jimenez-Gomez <corinaj@cc.usu.edu>
Eric Jacobs < eajacobs@siu.edu>
Peter Killeen <killeen@asu.edu>
Tim Koeltzow <tkoeltzow@bumail.bradley.edu>
Philip Kramer <PKramer@bcd.tamhsc.edu>
Elliot Ludvig <elliot@cs.ualberta.ca>
Olga Lazareva <olga-lazareva@uiowa.edu>
Greg Madden <gmadden@ku.edu>
Amy Odum <amy.odum@usu.edu>
Carol Parsonis <cparonis@hms.harvard.edu>
Matt Palmatier <mip16+@pitt.edu>
Chris Podlesnik < capodlesnik@cc.usu.edu >
Mark P. Reilly <reill1mp@cmich.edu>
Federico Sanabria <Federico.Sanabria@asu.edu>
Tim Shahan <Tim.Shahan@usu.edu>
Amanda Struthers <ams8681@hotmail.com>
Bill Timberlake <timberla@indiana.edu>
Ryan Ward <ryanward@cc.usu.edu>
Stan Weiss <sweiss@american.edu>
Bill Whitlow <bwhitlow@camden.rutgers.edu>
Jamie Wilkinson <wilkinsonjamie@hotmail.com>
Karl Zern <karl@med-associates.com>


Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior
Winter Park, Colorado
February 4 - 8, 2006

Saturday, February 4, 2006

7:00pm -- Buffet and Social Hour

8:15pm -- Opening Presentations, Ideas and Discussion

Welcome and introduction to the conference. Stan Weiss

Learning within the spinal cord: Cognition without a brain. Jim Grau, Texas A&M (15 min)

Schedule-induced polydipsia under explicit positive reinforcement. Ricardo Pellón, Luciana Bayeh & Ángeles Pérez-Padilla, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Madrid (15 min)

The Eastern Psychological Association: A contingency-related history. Stan Weiss, American University (10 min)


Sunday, February 5, 2006*

4:30pm -- Drugs, Learning & Behavior
Cody Brooks, Chair

A commonly self-administered IV nicotine dose serves as a CS for sucrose.
Jennifer E. Murray & Rick A. Bevins, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (10 min)

A contingency-based intervention that reduces contextual renewal of cocaine seeking. David N. Kearns & Stanley J. Weiss, American University (10 min)

Cocaine and bupropion generalize to a methamphetamine occasion setter. Carmela M. Reichel, Vanessa L. Barra, Sarah A. Berg, Jamie L. Wilkinson, & Rick A. Bevins, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (10 min)

The temporal dynamics of bupropion substitution for a nicotine CS. Jamie L. Wilkinson & Rick A. Bevins, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (10 min)

Comparable effects of cocaine- and food-based inhibitors on cocaine- or food-seeking: A confirmation of the Appetitive-Aversive Interaction Theory of Motivation. Stanley J. Weiss, David N. Kearns, Chesley J. Christensen & Mary E. Huntsberry, American University (15 min)

Extinction and reinstatement of lever pressing in enriched and isolated rats: Differential effects of amphetamine and sucrose. Emily D. Klein, Dustin J. Stairs, & Michael T. Bardo, University of Kentucky (10 min)

Reinforcing and aversive affects of caffeine measured by preference for caffeine-paired flavors before or after habitual caffeine consumption. Kevin P. Myers & Emily Izbicki, Bucknell University (15 min)

Monday, February 6, 2006*

4pm -- KEYNOTE ADDRESS

Are Animals Conscious? Turing's Test for Nonhumans.
Clive Wynne
University of Florida

5:15pm -- Focus Session: Approaches to Animal Consciousness and Cognition
Bill Timberlake, Chair & Organizer

Animal consciousness: What's the problem? Colin Allen, Indiana University (20 min)

On obtaining objective data on consciousness in other animals: Frontal assault or pincer movement? Gordon Burghardt, University of Tennessee (20 min)

What functional systems underlie consciousness in vertebrates? William Timberlake and Gary Lucas, Indiana University (20 min)

Divided attention and the matching law. Timothy A. Shahan & Christopher A. Podlesnik, Utah State University (15 min)

Acquisition of an olfactory learning set for sequences of constantly changing odors in mice.
Cindy Cai, Emily Katz, Oliver Rothschild, Karina Illescas, Andriana Herrera, Sofia Huang, Anna Wong, Yvette Wojciechowski, Aida Gil, QiJiang Yan & Robert P. Bauchwitz, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Institute for Health Sciences, Columbia University (15 min)

Discussion of Focus Session on Approaches to Consciousness and Cognition
Colin Allen, Moderator

The session participants plus Clive will have an opportunity to comment, with Clive leading off, followed by contributions and questions from the audience. (to end by 7:45pm).

8:30pm -- Dinner at Fontenot's

Tuesday, February 7, 2006*

4:30pm -Animal Cognition and Learning
Rick Bevins, Chair

Influence of apparatus design on conclusions about learning and memory. Robert. P. Bauchwitz, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Institute for Health Sciences, Columbia University (10 min)

Rapid solving of a simple problem apparatus by black throated monitor lizards. Gordon Burghardt (University of Tennessee), Jennifer Manrod (Knoxville Zoo), and Ruston Hartdegen (Dallas Zoo) (10 min)

Relative numerousness judgment and summation in young, middle-aged, and older adult orangutans. Ursula S. Anderson, Tara S. Stoinski, Mollie A. Bloomsmith, & Terry L. Maple, Atlanta Zoo & Georgia Inst. of Technology (10 min)

Renewal of conditioned sexual responses in domesticated quail (Coturnix japonica).
Mark A. Krause, University of Portland (10 min)

Hedonic versus anticipatory explanations of flavor preference produced by flavor-nutrient conditioning: insights from second-order pairings. Kevin P. Myers & Sean Bradley, Bucknell University (15 min)

Extinction and stress. Cody Brooks, Denison University (15 min)

Wednesday, February 8, 2006 -- Check out time is 10am
-----


2006 WCALB Organizing Committee

Stan Weiss, Convener & Program
Rick Bevins
Cody Brooks
Mark Reilly, Program
Bill Timberlake, Focus Session

*Five minutes will be added to the presentation times indicated for questions and discussion


Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior 2005
Winter Park, CO
February 5-9, 2005

Saturday, February 5, 2005

6:30pm -- Buffet and Social Hour

8pm -- Opening Presentations, Ideas and Discussion

Methodological and practical aspects of zoological research with mega-herbivores: Tactile same-different discrimination in African elephants.
Ursula Anderson, M. Jackson Marr, & Terry Maple (Georgia Institute of Technology)

Negative automaintenance does not maintain.
Federico Sanabria (Arizona State University)

Sunday, February 6, 2005*

4pm -- Drugs and Behavior: Cocaine & Nicotine
Kevin Myers, Chair

Repeated cocaine exposure does not increase sucrose "liking".
Emily D. Klein & Michael T. Bardo, (University of Kentucky) (10 min)

Cocaine and sex: Mechanistic and neural overlap.
Chana K. Akins & E. Harris (University of Kentucky) (15 min)

Self-administration of nicotine and environmental cues under concurrent schedules of reinforcement.
Matt Palmatier, F. Fay Evans-Martin, Alycia Hoffman, Anthony R. Caggiula, Nadia Chaudhri, & Alan F. Sved (University of Pittsburgh) (10 min)

Applying the appetitive-aversive interaction theory of motivation to reduce cocaine self- administration with a non-drug inhibitor.
Stanley J. Weiss & Dave N. Kearns (American University) (15 min)

Effects of US density in an appetitive Pavlovian discrimination task with nicotine as the CS.
Jamie L. Wilkinson & Rick A. Bevins (University of Nebraska-Lincoln) (10 min)

Nicotine as a conditional stimulus: Role of stimulus salience.
Jennifer E. Murray & Rick A. Bevins (University of Nebraska-Lincoln) (10 min)

Monday, February 7, 2005*

4pm -- KEYNOTE ADDRESS

Rational and Irrational Choice:
Discounting of Delayed and Probabilistic Outcomes
in Rats, Pigeons, and People.

Len Green
Washington University

5:15pm -- Focus Session: Choice in Humans and Other Animals
James S. MacDonall, Chair

An attempt to study delay discounting in humans: Strange doings on an adjusting amount procedure.
Eric A. Jacobs & Brian Kangas (Southern Illinois University-Carbondale) (15 min)

Discounting probabilistic rewards: Is there a magnitude effect?
Joel Myerson (Washington University) (15 min)

An assessment of the substitutability of wheel-running and sucrose reinforcement. Terry Belke, (Mount Allison University) (10 min)

Earning reinforcers and preference.
James S. MacDonall (Fordham University) (15 min)

Milk vs. milk choice in female rats: A prelude to milk vs. drug choice studies.
Carol A. Paronis (McLean Hospital/Harvard Medical School) (10 min)

Pavlovian influences on preference in an intertemporal choice procedure: Just how impulsive are pigeons?
Mark Reilly (Central Michigan University) (10 min)

The relationship between component choice and response rate on a multiple schedule.
Stan Weiss & David Thomas (American University & NIDA) (10 min)

8:00pm - Conference Dinner at Fontenot's

Tuesday, February 10, 2004*

5pm - Learning & Motivation
Chana K. Akins, Chair

Environmental enrichment decreases responding for visual novelty.
Mary E. Cain (Kansas State University), Thomas A Green, & Michael T. Bardo (University of Kentucky) (10 min)

Contextual cues associated with satiety can influence meal size in rats.
Kevin Myers, (Bucknell University) (10 min)

Formation and use of cognitive maps in rats.
Rebecca A. Singer & Thomas R. Zentall (University of Kentucky) (10 min)

Beacon training can both block and facilitate landmark learning in the water maze.
Bill Timberlake, S. A. Sinning, and J. Leffel (Indiana University) (15 min)

Wednesday, February 9, 2005 -- Check out time is 10am
-----
2005 WCALB Organizing Committee

Stan Weiss, Convener & Program
Rick Bevins
Cody Brooks
James S. MacDonall, Focus Session
Mark Reilly
Bill Timberlake

*Five minutes will be added to the presentation times indicated for questions and discussion


Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior
Winter Park, Colorado
February 7 - 11, 2004

Saturday, February 7, 2004

6:30pm -- Buffet and Social Hour

8pm -- Opening Short Presentations, Ideas and Discussion (5-15 min. each)

Impulsivity in Rats Predicts Subsequent Cocaine Self-Administration. Gregory J.
Madden, Marilyn Carroll, Jennifer Perry, Erin Larson and Jon German (University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire)

What do YOU Mean by "Voluntary"? Alan Neuringer (Reed College)

Pavlov and St. Petersburg. Stan Weiss (American University)

Discussion of the "Interdependence" problem posed by Frank Logan. (Moderated by Stan Weiss)

Sunday, February 8, 2004*

4pm -- Learning, Choice and Context Effects
Cody Brooks, Chair

Temporal Contiguity and Contingency. Lorraine Allan, & J. Tangen (McMaster University) (20 min.)

An Evaluation of the Rapid Demand Curve Assay Procedure Commonly Used in the Behavioral Economics Literature. Gregory J. Madden & Ryan Rowe (University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire) (15 min)

The Current Status of the "Hedonic-Shift" Hypothesis of Nutrient-Conditioned Flavor Preferences. Kevin Myers (Bucknell University) (20 min.)

Learning and Memory in Aged Rhesus Monkeys: Patterns of Impairment and Correlations with Brain Volume. Martha Neuringer, Steven Kohama, Noelle Landauer and Josephine Gold (Oregon Health & Science University) (20 min.)

10 Minute Break

Learning, Choice and Context Effects (continued)

Context Effects on Latent Inhibition and Renewal in a Human Conditioning Task. James Byron Nelson and Maria del Carmen Sanjuan (Central Arkansas University) (20 min.)

Perceptual learning, Flattening Generalization Gradients, and Contextual Change. Maria del Carmen Sanjuan and James Byron Nelson (Central Arkansas University) (20 min)

More on Partial Reinforcement in Pavlovian Conditioning. Bill Timberlake (Indiana University) (15 min.)

Monday, February 9, 20004*

4pm -- KEYNOTE ADDRESS

The Ghost in the Addict: Drug Anticipation and Drug Addiction
Shep Siegel
McMaster University

5:15pm -- Focus Session I:
Associative Mechanisms and Drug-Related Behavior
Mark Reilly, Chair

Place Conditioning: An unexploited Model of Associatively-Motivated Choice Behavior. Rick A. Bevins (University of Nebraska) (15 min.)

Investigations of Intraincentive Selective Associations When Behavior is Maintained by Food, Shock-Avoidance or Cocaine Self-Administration. Stanley Weiss, David Kearns, Scott Cohn, Charles Schindler and Leigh Panlilio (American University and NIDA Preclinical Research Laboratory) (20 min)

Strength of drug seeking is determined by drug dose and associated stimuli in cocaine self-administering rhesus monkeys. Patrick Beardsley and J. Newman (Virginia Commonwealth University) (15 min.)

Tuesday, February 10, 2004*

4pm -- Focus Session II:
Associative Mechanisms and Drug-Related Behavior (continued)
Stan Weiss, Chair

Ethanol Ataxia Tolerance. Cody Brooks (Denison University) (15 min.)

Preference for an Alcohol-Paired Flavor in Selectively Bred Rats. Nancy Dess (Occidental College) (15 min.)

Drug Contexts as Occasion Setters: Conditional Stimulus Modality and Drug Feature Pharmacology Affect Goal Tracking Topography in Rats. Matt Palmatier and Rick Bevins (University of Nebraska) (15 min.)

Sign Tracking of Drug-Paired Stimuli in the Rhesus Monkey. Mark P. Reilly, Sonja I. Berndt, James H. Woods and Gail Winger (Central Michigan University and University of Michigan) (20 min.)

Chronic Cocaine Pretreatment Facilitates Future Sexual Conditioning. Chana Akins and Neil Levens (University of Kentucky and Indiana University of Pennsylvania) (20 min.)

Cocaine-Induced Reinstatement Following Extinction With & Without Cocaine-Associated Stimuli. Patrick. M. Beardsley & K. L. Shelton, (Virginia Commonwealth University) (10 min.)

7:30pm -- Dinner at Fontenot's

Wednesday, February 11, 2004 -- Check out time is 10am
-----
2004 WCALB Organizing Committee

Stan Weiss, Convener & Program
Rick Bevins
Cody Brooks
Mark Reilly, Focus Group
Bill Timberlake


Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior
Winter Park, Colorado
February 8- 12, 2003

SATURDAY, February 8th

6:30-6:45
Welcome to WCALB
The Conference Committee: Stan Weiss, Rick Bevins, Melissa Burns, & Bill Timberlake

6:45-8:30
Dinner and 4 minute introductions, insights, ideas, inquiries, and inspirations, including but not limited to:

Can mice learn a win-stay contingency under aversive motivation?"
Charles Locurto
College of the Holy Cross

Sasquatch, innovation, and other mysteries
Rick Bevins
University of Nebraska, Lincoln


SUNDAY, February 9th

CONTEXT & CONNECTIONS
Chair: Rick Bevins

4:00-4:05
Setting the context: Find your slippers and grab some food and drink
Rick Bevins
University of Nebraska, Lincoln

Invited Talk

4:05 -5:05
Context, ambiguity, and unlearning: Sources of relapse after behavior extinction
Mark Bouton

University of Vermont

Presentations

5:05-5:30
Spontaneous recovery of ethanol tolerance
Cody Brooks & Joanne Vaughn
Denison University

5:30-5:55
Feature positive modulation of goal tracking by nicotine: Associative and
stimulus properties of the nicotine feature.

Matthew I. Palmatier & Rick Bevins
University of Nebraska, Lincoln

5:55-6:20
The discriminative stimulus effects of cocaine in Japanese Quail: Evidence for occasion-setting in a sexual reinforcement paradigm.
Chana Akins, J. Triosi, & C. Steger
University of Kentucky

6:20-6:45
The role of context in goal tracking
Melissa Burns & Michael Domjan
Texas Christian University and University of Texas

6:45-7:10
The context problem in studies of acquisition
Matt Lattal & Dan Gottlieb
University of Pennsylvania

7:10-7:30
Further discussion. Finding connections with the rest of psychology


MONDAY, February 10th

ANIMAL LEARNING: GENERAL
Chair: Mark Reilly

Presentations

4:00-4:30
The structure of individual differences in mouse problem-solving
Charles Locurto
College of the Holy Cross

4:30-5:00
Preparedness Revisited: Seligman and his critics were both right
Michael Domjan
University of Texas at Austin

5:00-5:30
Preconditioning, timing, and motivational modes
William Timberlake & Joseph Leffel
University of Indiana

5:30-6:00
Associative versus temporal interpretations of the immediate shock deficit in contextual fear conditioning
Deborah L. Stote
UCLA

6:00-6:30
Impulsive behavior: Evolutionary adaptation to aversive stimulation
Stephen Flora
Youngstown State University

6:30-7:00
Increased preference for later-larger reinforcers with bundled trials: A
partial animal model of human self-control

John Monterosso and George Ainslie
UCLA

7:00-7:30
Tests of unit price in a closed economy: Fixed-ratio and Random-ratio schedules
Gregory J. Madden
University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire


TUESDAY, February 11th

SEX, DRUGS, & BEHAVIOR
Chair: Chana Akins

Presentations

4:00-4:30
Implications of noradrenergic system in a novel-object recognition task
Kartpagam K. Karthigeyan & Rick Bevins
University of Nebraska, Lincoln

4:30-5:00
Sign-tracking (autoshaping) in rats: A comparison of cocaine and food as USs
David N. Kearns & Stanley J. Weiss
American University

5:00-5:30
The effects of naloxone on conditioned sexual behavior: Exploring state dependency
Kevin Holloway
Vassar College

5:30-6:00
Conditioned inhibition generated by food, shock-avoidance and cocaine self-administration contingencies
Stanley J. Weiss, David N. Kearns, Richard D. Weissman, Charles W. Schindler & Leigh V. Panlilio
American University and NIDA Preclinical Pharmacology Section

6:00-6:30
Hey, it's time for my nicotine…
Rick Bevins
University of Nebraska, Lincoln

6:30-7:00
The role of temporal contiguity in drug self-administration
Mark P. Reilly
Arizona State University

7:00-7:30
WCALB: 2004
Stan Weiss
American University

2003 WCALB Organizing Committee

Stan Weiss, Convener
Rick Bevins, Focus Group
Melissa Burns, Program
Bill Timberlake

 

 

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