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Shock elicited aggression

Powell. D.A. Walters, K. Duncan, S. and Holley, J.R. The effects of chlorpromazine and ( -amphetamine upon shock-elicited aggression. Psychopharmacologia 30 303-314, 1973. [Pg.97]

Shock-elicited aggression test Decreased Hastings et al., 1976... [Pg.59]

Rubidiiam ion seems to have opposite effects from lithlvun ion on CA metabolism and it has been suggested that it may have clinical antidepres-sive activity. It produces an increase in the release and turnover of brain stem NE and, unlike lithium ion, it induces an increase instead of a decrease in shock-elicited aggression in rats. Further comparisons of rubidium and lithium ions may shed considerable light on the biochemistry of the affective disorders if the initial clinical observations that njbidium has antldepresslve activity are confirmed by controlled studies. ... [Pg.25]

Similar to LSD and other monoamine hallucinogens, mescaline suppresses locomotor and exploratory behavior in novel environments (Wing et al. 1990). Also similar to LSD, tolerance develops to the behavioral effects of chronic doses of mescaline (Murray et al. 1977). Mescaline increases aggression in rat models (Sbordone et al. 1978) however, this is an elicited aggression (by electric shock) and does not necessarily generalize to human behavior. Increased aggression is not characteristic of humans using mescaline. [Pg.362]


See other pages where Shock elicited aggression is mentioned: [Pg.63]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.92]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.59 , Pg.63 ]




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