dopamimetic
Bluelighter
This is so true.Alexander's hypothesis was that drugs do not cause addiction, and that the apparent addiction to opiate drugs commonly observed in laboratory rats exposed to it is attributable to their living conditions, and not to any addictive property of the drug itself.[1] He told the Canadian Senate in 2001 that prior experiments in which laboratory rats were kept isolated in cramped metal cages, tethered to a self-injection apparatus, show only that "severely distressed animals, like severely distressed people, will relieve their distress pharmacologically if they can.
A recent documentary about cane toads in Australia made me think again about this. They showed a dog that willingly searched for such a toad and licked a bit on it - just enough to get high. Repeatedly. For years. He apparently enjoyed the psychedelia - something science (afaik) says animals don't.
It's not that the rats are that different from us. No one having to live in a small lab cage with some wires stuck into his body could actually enjoy a psychedelic trip, really.
Maybe this is a simple example. But hell, why are they still doing the same thing, more than 30 years later - and what could this not all implicate for the research on psych meds...!?
