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Essential value of cocaine and food in rats: tests of the exponential model of demand
Rationale To provide a prospective test of the predictive adequacy of the exponential model of demand (Hursh and Silberberg, Psych Rev 115(1):186–198, 2008). Objectives In Experiment 1, to measure the ‘ essential value ’ (the propensity to defend consumption with changes in price) of cocaine and foo...
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Published in: | Psychopharmacologia 2008-06, Vol.198 (2), p.221-229 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Rationale
To provide a prospective test of the predictive adequacy of the exponential model of demand (Hursh and Silberberg,
Psych Rev
115(1):186–198, 2008).
Objectives
In Experiment 1, to measure the ‘
essential value
’ (the propensity to defend consumption with changes in price) of cocaine and food in a demand analysis (functional relation between price and consumption) by means of the exponential model; in Experiment 2, to test whether the model’s systematic underestimation of cocaine consumption in Experiment 1 was due to weight loss; and in Experiment 3, to evaluate the effects of cocaine on the
essential value
of food.
Materials and methods
In Experiment 1, demand curves for food and cocaine were determined by measuring consumption of these goods in a multiple schedule over a range of fixed ratios; in Experiment 2, a demand curve for only cocaine was determined; and in Experiment 3, demand for food was determined in the absence of cocaine.
Results
In Experiment 1, the exponential equation accommodated high portions of variance for both curves, but systematically underestimated cocaine demand; in Experiment 2, this predictive underestimation of the equation was eliminated; and in Experiment 3, the
essential value
of food was greater than in Experiment 1.
Conclusions
The exponential model of demand accommodated the data variance for all cocaine and food demand curves. Compared to food, cocaine is a good of lower
essential value
. |
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ISSN: | 0033-3158 1432-2072 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00213-008-1120-0 |