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Conditioning of aversion to an odor paired with peripheral shock in the developing rat
Author(s) -
Kucharski David,
Spear Norman E.
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
developmental psychobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1098-2302
pISSN - 0012-1630
DOI - 10.1002/dev.420170505
Subject(s) - conditioning , odor , classical conditioning , psychology , developmental psychology , neuroscience , mathematics , statistics
Four experiments examined an apparent inability to associate, or severe deficiency in associating, an odor and a footshock during the first 2 weeks of life in the rat, a cue‐to‐consequence relationship that had formerly seemed age‐dependent. With a particular classical conditioning procedure, however, significiant conditioning occurred on postnatal Days 6 and 10 with relatively few conditioning trials; the procedure employed an odor explicitly unpaired with footshock (CS−), as well as an odor paired with footshock (CS+) (Experiment I). Experiment II assessed the contribution of a CS− exposure in the conditioning of rats 8, 15, or 50 days of age. For 8‐day‐olds, exposure to both the CS+ and CS− resulted in conditioned aversion to the CS+ after eight but not one conditioning trials, but neither 1 nor eight trials with only a CS+ produced conditioning. For 15‐ and 50‐day‐olds, conditioning to the CS+ odor was significant after one trial with, but not without, a specific CS− with eight trials, however, conditioning was significant with or without the specific CS−. It was verified with the 50‐day‐olds in Experiment III that aversion to the CS+ was conditioned with a single trial only if a CS− had been presented, with a slight trend toward superior conditioning if the CS− preceded rather than followed the CS+ during conditioning. Experiment IV tested the hypothesis that exposure to the distinctive CS− odor sensitzes the animal to the specific properties of the CS+ odor. Fifteen and 50‐day‐old rats were given one conditioning trial with a CS+ odor that was either unaccompanied by a CS− or that was presented with a CS− odor in the same context as the CS+ or in a different context. For both 15− and 50‐day‐old rats, conditioning to the CS+ occurred only for animals given the CS− in the same context as the CS+, indicating that the hypothesis should be rejected. The results generally indicate rapid and substantial odor‐footshock conditioning in rats as young as 6 days of age, with CS‐exposure established as perhaps especially significant for conditioning early in life, but important for rats of all ages tested, from infancy to adulthood.