Abstract
73 MALE LONG-EVANS HOODED RATS WHICH CONSISTENTLY ATTACKED AND KILLED MICE STOPPED DOING SO WHEN PUNISHED WITH SHOCK CONTINGENT UPON THE EMISSION OF ATTACKS. ATTACK BEHAVIOR WAS NOT SUPPRESSED BY SHOCKS UNCORRELATED WITH AND TEMPORALLY REMOTE FROM ATTACKS OR BY SHOCKS IMMEDIATLEY CONTINGENT UPON MOUSE PRESENTATION, NOR DID SUCH SHOCKS ALTER LATER REACTIVITY TO ATTACK-CONTINGENT PUNISHMENT. THE COURSE OF RECOVERY OF ATTACK BEHAVIOR AFTER TERMINATION OF RESPONSE-CONTINGENT PUNISHMENT WAS THE SAME WHETHER UNPUNISHED RECOVERY TESTS BEGAN IMMEDIATLEY OR WERE DELAYED FOR 4 OR 7 DAYS. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: