CONDITIONED PLACE PREFERENCE (CPP)
Description
Conditioned place preference (CPP) is a behavioral paradigm used in neuroscience to study the rewarding or aversive effects of drugs, stimuli, or experiences on an organism. The basic idea behind CPP is to pair a specific environment or context with a particular stimulus, such as a drug or a rewarding experience, and then observe the animal's preference for that environment over a neutral environment.
Acknowledgements
References
McKendrick, G., & Graziane, N. M. (2020). Drug-Induced Conditioned Place Preference and Its Practical Use in Substance Use Disorder Research. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 14.
Get started with this template for freeDon’t start from scratch.
Create professional scientific illustrations quickly and easily, even without any design expertise
- Get started with a huge library of editable icons and templates such as common biological pathways, anatomy, or genetics.
- Create figures that effectively communicate your research in half the time using our editable icons.
- Use our PDB tool to quickly generate and customize protein structures