Abstract: | One-day-old rats learned aversions to a novel taste paired with lithium-induced distress and to a tactile stimulus paired with brief electric shocks. However, aversions did not develop when taste was paired with shock or when the tactile stimulus was paired with lithium treatment. The aversions occurred only when lithium treatment immediately followed taste exposure and when shock was concurrent with exposure to the tactile stimulus. These findings indicate that selective associations in aversion learning are mediated by innate mechanisms that govern conditioning in the absence of extensive ontogenetic experience. The present research also shows that selective associations are sufficient for the occurrence of long-delay learning. |