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Preweanling and adult rats treat conditioned light-tone combinations differently

Authors :
Philipp J. Kraemer
Norman E. Spear
Source :
Animal Learning & Behavior. 18:113-123
Publication Year :
1990
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1990.

Abstract

Ontogenetic differences in processing light-tone compounds were discovered in preweanling (17-day-old) and adult (60–80-day-old) rats. Suppression of general activity was used as an index of the magnitude of conditioned fear following a single training session in which a CS+ was paired with mild footshock. In Experiment 1, rats were trained on discriminations in which the CS− consisted of a light and the CS+ was either a tone alone (simple discrimination) or a light-tone compound (simultaneous feature-positive discrimination). Adults and preweanlings given each type of discrimination were then tested for fear of the CS− and a target stimulus (tone alone or light-tone compound). Adults in all groups displayed greater fear of the target than of the CS−. Preweanlings, however, discriminated the CS− from the target only when the target was the same as the original CS+. Experiment 2 revealed that age-related differences in conventional stimulus generalization is not a likely explanation for the pattern of results found in Experiment 1. Experiment 3 revealed age-related differences in expressed fear of a serial feature-positive discrimination; adults, but not preweanlings, showed greater fear of the compound than of the CS−. Alternative interpretations of the results from these experiments are discussed, and the general conclusion is that adults appear more inclined to process elements of a compound stimulus selectively, whereas preweanlings seem more likely to process the compound unselectively, with roughly equivalent processing of each element.

Details

ISSN :
15325830 and 00904996
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Animal Learning & Behavior
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2ec8579601972f08b4034f8e3b15ed4a