The effect of swimming experience on acquisition and retention of swimming-based taste aversion learning in rats |
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Authors: | Takahisa Masaki |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Psychology, Nagoya University, Japan b Department of Psychological Science, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan |
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Abstract: | Swimming endows rats with an aversion to a taste solution consumed before swimming. The present study explored whether the experience of swimming before or after the taste-swimming trials interferes with swimming-based taste aversion learning. Experiment 1 demonstrated that a single preexposure to 20 min of swimming was as effective as four or eight preexposures in causing the interference effect. Experiment 2 found that a single 5-min preexposure was enough to cause the interference effect. Experiment 3 showed that preexposure to swimming interfered with but did not completely thwart the acquisition of swimming-based taste aversion learning. Experiment 4 failed to demonstrate a reliable retroactive interference effect by swimming postexposures. With a modified procedure, however, Experiment 5 successfully demonstrated a reliable effect by four postexposures. The associative and habituation accounts of these results are discussed. |
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Keywords: | Conditioned taste aversion Swimming Exercise Preexposure Postexposure Habituation Rats |
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