Literature DB >> 6288778

Flavor-illness aversions: potentiation of odor by taste with toxin but not shock in rats.

K W Rusiniak, C C Palmerino, A G Rice, D L Forthman, J Garcia.   

Abstract

Potentiation of odor by taste in rats was tested in a variety of situations. In three experiments, almond odor and saccharin taste were presented either as a single conditioned stimulus (CS) or as a compound CS and followed by either toxic lithium chloride or footshock. Extinction tests with the almond and saccharin components were then given. In single CS-toxin experiments, taste was more effective than odor, and after compound conditioning, the taste component potentiated the odor component. Conversely, in single CS-shock experiments, odor was more effective than taste, and after compound conditioning, no potentiation was observed. Rather, interference effects were observed. In Experiments 1 and 2, the addition of taste disrupted odor CS-shock conditioning, and in Experiment 3, odor interfered with taste CS-shock conditioning. Visceral feedback is apparently a necessary unconditioned stimulus for the potentiation of odor by taste. These data support the neural convergence and gating hypothesis of flavor aversion conditioning.

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Year:  1982        PMID: 6288778     DOI: 10.1037/h0077902

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Physiol Psychol        ISSN: 0021-9940


  8 in total

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3.  Potentiation of taste and extract stimuli in conditioned flavor preference learning.

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7.  Short-term memory reactivation of a weak CS-US association promotes long-term memory persistence in conditioned odor aversion.

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8.  The orexinergic system influences conditioned odor aversion learning in the rat: a theory on the processes and hypothesis on the circuit involved.

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  8 in total

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