| Literature DB >> 6626273 |
S Stern, V G Laties, C V Stancampiano, C Cox, J O de Lorge.
Abstract
Rats partially deprived of food were trained individually to press a lever in the presence of a vertical, 60-Hz electric field and not to press in its absence. Correct detections that occurred during brief, 3- or 4-s trials occasionally produced a food pellet. The probability of detecting the field was found to increase as field strength increased. The threshold of detection, ie, the field strength required for detections at a probability of 0.5 after correction for errors, was generally between 4 and 10 kV/m. The range of field strengths between almost zero and almost 100% correctness of detection was approximately 8 kV/m. A logistic function provided a good description of the increase in the detection probability with increasing field strength. These performances occurred reliably in 19 rats, some of which were studied for 2 years. Control procedures showed that the behavior required that the rat be in the electric field; the behavior was not controlled by any of several potentially confounding variables.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1983 PMID: 6626273 DOI: 10.1002/bem.2250040304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioelectromagnetics ISSN: 0197-8462 Impact factor: 2.010