The aims of the present study were to investigate the effect of the benzodiazepine antagonist, flumazenil, on operant responding in rats treated chronically with the short-acting hypnotic triazolam and to study the consequence of chronic triazolam treatment on the time course of effects of triazolam and zolpidem. Zolpidem is an imidazopyridine with a pharmacological and behavioral profile that differs from that of the benzodiazepine hypnotics. Rats were treated with saline or triazolam (1 or 3 mg/kg) twice daily for 5 days and were tested daily 1, 3, 5.5 or 7.5 h after injection. In addition, on the 5th day of chronic treatment all rats were injected with flumazenil (10 mg/kg) 10 min before session. The time course of effects of triazolam and zolpidem was determined after cessation of repeated saline or triazolam treatment. Tolerance to the depressant effect of 1 mg/kg of triazolam developed during long-term administration. Flumazenil decreased operant responding in rats pretreated with triazolam. The effect was statistically significant when rats had received 1 mg/kg of triazolam 3 h before the session or 3 mg/kg of triazolam 3, 5.5 or 7.5 h before the session. After cessation of chronic treatment, rats pretreated chronically with 3 mg/kg of triazolam displayed decreased sensitivity to triazolam and to 10 mg/kg but not 3 mg/kg of zolpidem. The present results indicate that chronic treatment with triazolam induces tolerance To the rate-decreasing effect of the drug and dependence as measured by flumazenil-induced disruption of operant responding. The limited degree of cross-tolerance between zolpidem and triazolam may suggest that their pharmacological mechanisms of action are distinct.