Conditioned taste aversions and neophobia in rats with hippocampal lesions.
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology
- Vol. 90 (7) , 680-693
- https://doi.org/10.1037/h0077236
Abstract
Extensive hippocampal lesions retarded, but did not prohibit, the conditioning of a strong taste aversion to physiological saline (the conditioned stimulus; CS) when illness (the unconditioned stimulus; UCS) was induced by injecting rats with apomorphine 15 min following ingestion of the saline. Hippocampal lesions reduced the aversiveness of novelty in a drinking fluid for the thirsty rat. It is suggested that the mild impairment of taste aversion learning in the rats with hippocampal lesions was not the result of destruction of mnemonic mechanisms that serve to span the long CS-UCS interval but rather that the reduced intensity of the aversion resulted from a lesion-altered neophobic disposition that weakened the saliency of the novel flavor CS.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Trace conditioning with X-rays as an aversive stimulusPsychonomic Science, 1967