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Learning to sham feed: behavioral adjustments to loss of physiological postingestional stimuli
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1990
Year
NutritionAffective NeuroscienceSensory SciencePsychologySocial SciencesBehavioral AdjustmentsPublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyAppetiteBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceAnimal NutritionReal IntakeProgressive IncreaseNervous SystemPhysiological Postingestional StimuliExperimental PsychologyBehavior Change (Individual)Experimental Analysis Of BehaviorBehavioural PhysiologyPhysiologyM Sucrose
The progressive increase in intake of a concentrated (0.8 M sucrose) solution seen when rats are first exposed to the sham-feeding procedure can be prevented by interspersing two real-feeding tests between each sham-feeding test. Under these conditions, sham intake is significantly larger than real intake but significantly smaller than intake on the fifth consecutive sham-feeding test. This result indicates that there is a learned negative-feedback signal based on the association of the taste and postingestive effects of 0.8 M sucrose which extinguishes under consecutive sham-feeding tests. Analysis of the rate of ingestion during the tests revealed that the conditioned negative-feedback signal operates during the first 6 min of a sham-feeding test that follows real-feeding tests. The effect of the absence of an unconditional negative-feedback signal appears from approximately 6 to approximately 20 min during a sham-feeding test.