“…The affinities of several cocaine-like drugs for the DAT correlate well with their potencies for supporting self-administration behavior (Ritz et al, 1987;Bergman, Madras, Johnson, & Spealman, 1989;Wilcox, Paul, & Woolverton, 1999). Cocaine and selective DAT inhibitors exert similar effects on schedule-controlled behavior and are reliably self-administered in squirrel monkeys (Bergman et al, 1989;Howell & Byrd, 1991;Howell, Czoty, Kuhar, & Carroll, 2000;Kimmel, O'Connor, Carroll, & Howell, 2007) and rhesus monkeys (Nader, Grant, Davies, Mach, & Childers 1997;Lile et al, 2003;Lindsey et al, 2004;Wilcox et al, 2005Kimmel et al, 2008). Importantly, a variety of preclinical studies in nonhuman primates provide evidence that DAT inhibitors can effectively attenuate cocaine self-administration (Glowa et al, 1995;Nader et al, 1997;Howell et al, 2000;Wilcox et al, 2002;Lindsey et al, 2004;.…”