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Dive into the research topics where Sally L. Huskinson is active.

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Featured researches published by Sally L. Huskinson.


Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2015

Delay discounting of food by rhesus monkeys: Cocaine and food choice in isomorphic and allomorphic situations.

Sally L. Huskinson; William L. Woolverton; Leonard Green; Joel Myerson; Kevin B. Freeman

Research on delay discounting has focused largely on nondrug reinforcers in an isomorphic context in which choice is between alternatives that involve the same type of reinforcer. Less often, delay discounting has been studied with drug reinforcers in a more ecologically valid allomorphic context where choice is between alternatives involving different types of reinforcers. The present experiment is the first to examine discounting of drug and nondrug reinforcers in both isomorphic and allomorphic situations using a theoretical model (i.e., the hyperbolic discounting function) that allows for comparisons of discounting rates between reinforcer types and amounts. The goal of the current experiment was to examine discounting of a delayed, nondrug reinforcer (food) by male rhesus monkeys when the immediate alternative was either food (isomorphic situation) or cocaine (allomorphic situation). In addition, we sought to determine whether there was a magnitude effect with delayed food in the allomorphic situation. Choice of immediate food and immediate cocaine increased with amount and dose, respectively. Choice functions for immediate food and cocaine generally shifted leftward as delay increased. Compared to isomorphic situations in which food was the immediate alternative, delayed food was discounted more steeply in allomorphic situations where cocaine was the immediate alternative. Notably, discounting was not affected by the magnitude of the delayed reinforcer. These data indicate that how steeply a delayed nondrug reinforcer is discounted may depend more on the qualitative characteristics of the immediate reinforcer and less on the magnitude of the delayed one.


Physiology & Behavior | 2015

Corn oil, but not cocaine, is a more effective reinforcer in obese than in lean Zucker rats.

Edward Townsend; Lauren N. Beloate; Sally L. Huskinson; Peter G. Roma; Kevin B. Freeman

Obesity is associated with abnormal brain reactivity in response to palatable food consumption, a factor that may contribute to non-homeostatic eating. However, little is known about how obesity interacts with the reinforcing effects of highly palatable constituents of food (e.g., fat), and if altered reinforcement processes associated with obesity generalize to non-food reinforcers. The current study compared the reinforcing effects of a fat (corn oil) and a drug of abuse (cocaine) in obese and lean Zucker rats. Specifically, obese and lean Zucker rats self-administered corn oil or intravenous cocaine in a behavioral economic demand procedure. For corn oil, maximum demand was higher and demand elasticity was lower in the obese rats compared to their lean counterparts. However, there were no differences in demand for cocaine between the obese and lean rats. These results demonstrate that a fat in the form of corn oil is a more effective reinforcer in obese Zucker rats. However, the fact that demand for cocaine was not different between the obese and lean rats suggests that differences in reward mechanisms may be reinforcer-specific and do not necessarily generalize to non-food reinforcers.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2015

Discriminative-stimulus effects of second generation synthetic cathinones in methamphetamine-trained rats

Jennifer E. Naylor; Kevin B. Freeman; Bruce E. Blough; William L. Woolverton; Sally L. Huskinson


Neuropharmacology | 2014

Predicting abuse potential of stimulants and other dopaminergic drugs: overview and recommendations.

Sally L. Huskinson; Jennifer E. Naylor; James K. Rowlett; Kevin B. Freeman


Psychopharmacology | 2017

Self-administration and behavioral economics of second-generation synthetic cathinones in male rats

Sally L. Huskinson; Jennifer E. Naylor; Edward Townsend; James Rowlett; Bruce E. Blough; Kevin B. Freeman


Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2016

Shallow discounting of delayed cocaine by male rhesus monkeys when immediate food is the choice alternative.

Sally L. Huskinson; Joel Myerson; Leonard Green; James K. Rowlett; William L. Woolverton; Kevin B. Freeman


Psychopharmacology | 2017

Choice between variable and fixed cocaine injections in male rhesus monkeys

Sally L. Huskinson; Kevin B. Freeman; Nancy M. Petry; James Rowlett


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2017

Novel environment response as a predictor of midazolam self-administration in rats

James E. Cook; Sally L. Huskinson; Barak W. Gunter; Kevin B. Freeman; James K. Rowlett


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2017

Variable availability as a determinant of cocaine choice in rhesus monkeys

Sally L. Huskinson; Kevin B. Freeman; Nancy M. Petry; James Rowlett


Psychopharmacology | 2015

Self-administration of cocaine and remifentanil by monkeys under concurrent-access conditions.

Sally L. Huskinson; Kevin B. Freeman; William L. Woolverton

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Kevin B. Freeman

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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James K. Rowlett

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Jennifer E. Naylor

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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William L. Woolverton

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Edward Townsend

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Joel Myerson

Washington University in St. Louis

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Leonard Green

Washington University in St. Louis

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Nancy M. Petry

University of Connecticut

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