Effects of the dopamine (DA) D1 antagonist SCH 23390 and the DA D2 antagonist (-)-sulpiride on apomorphine-induced characteristic changes in spontaneous motor activity were investigated in mice using the system we have devised for automatically analyzing animal behaviors in mice. Apomorphine (3 mg/kg, SC) markedly increased parameters of spontaneous motor activity such as locomotor activity and rearing time. Apomorphine-induced increase in locomotor activity had peaks at 5-20 and 30-50 min after administration, and its trough was closely related to the marked increase in rearing time induced by this agonist. Apomorphine-induced locomotor activity accumulated over a 40-min period from 5 to 45 min after apomorphine injection, during which apomorphine-induced increase in rearing time peaked, was significantly increased by intraperitoneal administration of 0.03 and 0.1 but not 0.01 mg/kg SCH 23390. Apomorphine-induced increase in rearing time was dose-dependently depressed by this antagonist. In contrast, (-)-sulpiride (10-40 mg/kg, IP) decreased apomorphine-induced increases in rearing time and locomotor activity rather than enhancing the latter parameter. These data suggest that the apparent enhancement by SCH 23390 of apomorphine-induced locomotor activity is mediated through DA D1 receptors and does not always correlate with depression of apomorphine-induced rearing behavior in mice.