Single-unit activity was recorded in the neostriatum of locally-anesthetized, immobilized rats which had received either a unilateral injection of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) into the nigro-neostriatal dopamine pathway, or repeated injections (twice daily for 6 days) of saline, 1.0, 5.0 or 10.0 mg/kg (+)-amphetamine. A staircase regimen of apomorphine was administered intravenously to each rat to determine if the long-term administration of amphetamine changed the sensitivity of postsynaptic dopamine receptors in a way comparable to that produced by 6-hydroxydopamine. In all groups, the most frequent response to apomorphine was inhibition of neostriatal activity. In saline-treated rats, most units were moderately excited by small doses of apomorphine (0.0025-0.02 mg/kg) and then inhibited by doses exceeding 0.04 mg/kg. In rats with lesions induced by 6-hydroxydopamine, apomorphine caused significantly more inhibition than in saline-treated animals. By contrast, neuronal responses in amphetamine-treated rats were not significantly different from those of saline controls. These results indicate that the long-term administration of amphetamine produces an augmentation of behavior by some mechanism other than an increase in the sensitivity of postsynaptic dopamine receptors.