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Stanley
J. Weiss, Ph.D.
The Ohio
State University, 1963
Professor of Experimental Psychology
Instrumental
Learning and Classical Conditioning Laboratory
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Research
Interests
My current
research concentrates on:
- Stimulus Control
of Behavior
- Incentive Motivation
- Drugs and Behavior
- Animal Models of
Drug Abuse
- Biological Constraints
on Learning
- Two-Process Learning
Theory
- Appetitive-Aversive
Interaction Theory of Motivation
- Fullbright Scholar/Researcher
at Pavlov Medical University, St. Petersburg, Russia
- Twenty-five years
of NIMH Extramural Research Grants
- NIMH and NSF Fellowships
- American Psychological
Association, Elected Fellow of:
- Division 3 (Experimental
Psychology)
- Division 25 (Experimental
Analysis of Behavior)
- Elected to Board of
Directors, Eastern Psychological Association
Current
Research Support
Title:
Incentive Properties of Abused Drugs
Sponsor:
NIDA
Amount of Award:
$850,000
Effective Dates:
Aug. 2002 through Aug. 2007
Abstract:
There is a developing consensus that environmental stimuli associated
with the drug-taking experience can acquire the capacity to energize
drug craving, seeking and consumption. The PI has developed a
"stimulus-compounding" model of drug abuse that elucidates
how multiple drug-associated stimuli interact to motivate drug-related
behavior. Research stimulated by this model has revealed that
simply exposing rats to certain combinations of drug-related cues
can override the mechanisms that normally regulate drug-intake,
causing them to double their intake of cocaine or heroin and triple
their rates of drug seeking. The human drug abuse environment
is rife with cues that could have analogous effects. Thus, environmentally-induced
enhancement of drug intake may be one factor responsible for the
spiraling escalation and "uncontrollability" of drug
use often seen in addicted individuals. In the proposed research,
we will continue to investigate the excitatory conditions that
determine how long this escalation is sustained. However, the
proposed research will primarily explore methods by which drug
taking can be reduced.
Conditioned inhibitors are stimuli that signal drug absence and
may thereby attenuate or even eliminate the incentive motivation
that drives drug-related behavior. The systematic investigation
of conditioned inhibition within the context of drug self-administration
will be the major new objective of this program and should provide
information relevant to the treatment of drug abuse. Strategies
will be compared to determine the most effective means of counteracting
a history of excitatory drug-related conditioning. When the program
is completed, we should have a better understanding of: (1) how
conditioned inhibitors can attenuate the motivation to abuse drugs,
(2) how the motivational effects of multiple drug-related stimuli
might lead to persistent, uncontrollable escalation of drug use,
and (3) how drug and non-drug reinforcement processes are related.
Representative
Publications
Weiss, S. J., Kearns, D., Cohn, S., Schindler, C. W., & Panlilio,
L. V. (2003). Stimulus Control of Drug Self-Administration. Journal
of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2003, 79,
111-135.
Kearns,
D. N., Weiss, S. J., & Panlilio, L. V. (2002). Conditioned
suppression of behavior maintained by cocaine. Drug & Alcohol
Dependence, 65, 253-261
Panlilio,
L. V., Weiss, S., J., & Schindler, C. W. (2000). Effects of
compounding drug-related stimuli: escalation of heroin self-administration.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2000,
73, 211-222.
Weiss,
S. J., Thomas, D. A., & Weissman, R. D. (1996). Combining
operant-baseline derived conditioned excitors and inhibitors from
the same and different incentive class: An investigation of appetitive-aversive
interactions. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 49B, 357-381.
Weiss,
S. J., Panlilio, L. V., & Schindler, C. W. (1993).Single-incentive
selective associations produced solely as a function of compound-stimulus
conditioning context. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal
Behavior Processes, 19, 284-294.
Weiss,
S. J., & Weissman, R. W. (1992). Generalization peakshift
for operant and autoshaped keypecks. Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 57, 127-143.
Weiss,
S. J., & Schindler, C. W. (1985). Conditioning history and
inhibitory instrumental stimulus control: Independent-groups and
within-subjects measures. Animal Learning & Behavior,
13, 215-222.
Weiss,
S. J. & Dacanay, R. (1982). Incentive processes and the peak
shift. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
37, 441-453.
Weiss,
S. J. (1978). Discriminated response and incentive processes in
operant conditioning: A two-factor model of stimulus control.
A integrative theoretical article in the Journal of the Experimental
Analysis of Behavior, 30, 361-381.
Weiss, S. J. (1972).
Stimulus compounding in free-operant and classical conditioning:
A review and analysis. Psychological Bulletin, 78,
189-208.
Some
Former Graduate Students
M.
Catherine Bushnell, Professor & Harold Griffith Chair,
Dept. of Anesthesia, McGill University Health Center, (56+ Publications).
Dissertation: An investigation of behavioral contrast and peak
shift for autoshaped and operant behavior.
Charles
Cunningham, Professor, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral
Neuroscience, McMaster University Health Sciences, (52+ publications).
Dissertation: Compounding discriminative stimuli controlling free-operant
responding: A comparative analysis of complex stimulus control
in the normal and retarded child.
Leigh
Panlilio, IRTA Fellow, NIDA Intramural Research Program, (15+
publications). Dissertation: Cocaine self-administration increased
by compounding discriminative stimuli.
Charles
Schindler, Senior Research Psychologist, Preclinical Pharmacology
Laboratory, NIDA Intramural Research Program, (76+ publications).
Dissertation: The influence of positive and negative reinforcement
on selective attention.
David
Thomas, Acting Chief, Translational Research Branch, Division
of Neuroscience, NIDA (24+ publications). Dissertation: Effects
of chlordiazepoxide and lumazenil on preference for punished and
unpunished response alternatives in rats.
Richard
Weissman, Team Leader and Clinical Coordinator, Children's
Crisis Treatment Center, (3 publications). Dissertation: Simultaneous
appetitive and defensive arousal on an operant baseline without
reciprocal inhibition.
Recent
Presentations
SJW has made approximately 170 such presentations. Those given
in 2003 through June 2004 are listed below:
2003 Fulbright Lectures
Pavlov Medical University, St. Petersburg, Russia
OPERANT
AND CLASSICAL CONDITIONING:
A POINT NATURAL OF INTERSECTION
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Basic
Principles of Operant Learning and Stimulus Control
The
Instrumentally Derived Incentive-Motive Function
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Stimulus
Control of Free-Operant Avoidance: Establishing the Discriminative-
Response Function
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Algebraic
Combination of the Incentive-Motive and Discriminative-Response
Processes: A Two-Factor Model of Stimulus Control and Applications
to Drug Self-Administration
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The
Selective Association Biological Constraint on Learning and
the Incentive- Motive Process: Investigations with Food, Shock
Avoidance and Drug Self Administration
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The
Appetitive-Aversive Interaction Theory of Motivation: Investigations
with Food, Shock-Avoidance and Cocaine Self-Administration Maintained
Behaviors
Weiss, S. J., Kearns,
D S., Schindler, C. W., Panlilio, L. V. & Weissman (2003).
Conditioned Inhibition for food, shock-avoidance and cocaine self-administration
maintained behavior. Winter Conference on Animal Learning and
Behavior, Winter Park, CO.
Kearns, D., & Weiss,
S. J. (2003). Investigations of sign-tracking (autoshaping) to
food and to cocaine-related stimuli. Eastern Psychological Association,
Baltimore, MD.
Weiss, S. J., Kearns,
D S., Schindler, C. W., Panlilio, L. V (2003). Drug-related conditioned
inhibition: A comparison of A+/AB- and A+/B- designs.. Psychonomic
Society, Vancouver, Canada. (In Abstracts of the Psychonomic Society,
2003, 8)
Invited Addresses:
Stimulus control and
incentive motivation: From food to drug self-administration. Finland
National Institute of Health, Helsinki, Finland, 2003.
The instrumentally
derived incentive-motive function: Applications to drug self-administration.
Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA, 2003.
Stimulus control of
cocaine self-administration.
Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, 2003
Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA, 2003
Weiss, Stanley J. (2004).
Pavlov and St. Petersburg. Winter Conference on Animal Learning
and Behavior, Winter Park, CO.
Weiss, S. J., Kearns,
D., Cohn, S., Schindler, C. W., & Panlilio, L. V. (2004).
Investigations of intraincentive selective associations when behavior
is maintained by food, shock-avoidance or cocaine Self-administration.
Winter Conference on Animal Learning and Behavior, Winter Park,
CO.
Cohn, S. I., &
Weiss, S. J. (2004). Compounding olfactory and auditory discriminative
stimuli on a free-operant baseline. Eastern Psychological Association,
Washington, DC.
Kearns, D. N., &
Weiss, S. J. (2004). Reinstating of a food-maintained operant
response produced by compounding discriminative stimuli. Eastern
Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
Weiss, S. J., Kearns,
D S., Schindler, C. W., Panlilio, L. V (2004). Animal model of
drug abuse demonstarates that cocaine seeking in humans might
be reduced by environmental cues through conditioned inhibition.
American Society of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics,
Washington, DC. (Abstracted in The Pharmacologist, 2004, 46.)
Kearns, D S., Weiss,
S. J., Schindler, C. W., Panlilio, L. V (2004). Reduction of cocaine-seeking
through conditioned inhibition. International Study Group Investigating
Drugs as Reinforcers. San Juan, PR.
Abridged
Curriculum Vitae
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