The compensatory role of food-motivation in the maze learning performance of lactationally undernourished rats
- 30 June 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Developmental Psychobiology
- Vol. 12 (4) , 305-315
- https://doi.org/10.1002/dev.420120405
Abstract
To test the hypothesis that the motivational effects of neonatal undernutrition might conceal the detrimental effects on learning, we tested previously undernourished and normally nourished Sprague-Dawley rats on learning of a novel maze pattern under either latent learning (nonappetitive) or food-motivated conditions. Under the nonappetitive conditions, the previously under-nourished rats learned significantly less than the normal controls, but when motivated for food, the undernourished rats performed as well as the controls. When learning performance measures are sensitive to motivation, differential motivation between undernourished and normal subjects must be controlled or eliminated.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of infantile undernutrition on adult learning in rats: Methodological and design problems.Psychological Bulletin, 1976
- Malnutrition and Animal Models of Cognitive DevelopmentPublished by Springer Nature ,1975
- Studies of undernutrition in the young rat: Methodological considerationsDevelopmental Psychobiology, 1970
- Effect of Early Malnutrition on the Reaction of Adult Rats to Aversive StimuliNature, 1970
- Effect of Malnutrition in Early Life on Avoidance Conditioning and Behavior of Adult RatsJournal of Nutrition, 1968
- Effect of Undernutrition on the Size and Composition of the Rat BrainJournal of Nutrition, 1968
- The effect of protein deficiency on maze performance of domestic Norway rats.Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1954
- The effects of infant feeding-frustration upon adult hoarding in the albino rat.The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1941
- The effect of quantitative and qualitative stunting upon maze learning in the white rat.Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1926
- Relative values of reward and punishment in habit formation.Psychobiology, 1917