Rapid acquisition of conditioned flavor preferences in rats.

标题Rapid acquisition of conditioned flavor preferences in rats.
文章类型Journal Article
发表年度2009
作者Ackroff, K., Dym C., Yiin Y. - M., & Sclafani A.
期刊Physiology & behavior
97
3-4
页码406-13
发表日期2009 Jun 22
关键词Animals, Behavior, Animal, Choice Behavior, Conditioning, Classical, Conditioning, Operant, Extinction, Psychological, Female, Food Preferences, Glucose, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, saccharin, Sweetening Agents, Taste, Time Factors, 嗅觉生理
摘要

Rats learn to prefer flavors paired with the post-oral effects of glucose. The present study examined how rapidly they acquire this preference. In Experiment 1, food-restricted rats were given repeated three-session training/testing cycles: one 30-min session with a CS+ flavor paired with intragastric (IG) infusion of 16% glucose, another session with a CS- flavor paired with IG water, and a third session with a choice between the flavors with their infusates. The rats preferred the CS+ (69%) in the first choice session, and preference increased across the six cycles to 86%. These data demonstrate that the post-oral reinforcing action of glucose is potent enough to support one-trial learning. In Experiment 2, two groups of rats were trained in the same way, with the CS+ flavor paired with IG infusion of 16% glucose or 7.1% corn oil emulsion, but tests were conducted under extinction conditions, with both CS+ and CS- flavors paired with IG water. Significant preference for the CS+ was acquired more rapidly with glucose (71% CS+ in test 1) than with oil (69% CS+ in test 4). Consistent with previous work, the post-oral stimulation by glucose was more potent than that of isocaloric oil emulsion in conditioning preferences. The last experiment examined the acquisition rate for a flavor-taste conditioned preference. Rats were trained with a CS+ flavor mixed into an 8% fructose + 0.2% saccharin solution and a CS- flavor in 0.2% saccharin. The same three-session training/testing cycles were used, and in the tests the flavors were presented in saccharin. A significant 74% preference for the CS+ flavor was apparent by the second test. Together these studies show that the acquisition of flavor preferences, whether based on flavor-taste or flavor-nutrient associations, can be quite rapid.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2683915/?tool=pubmed
Alternate JournalPhysiol. Behav.