Journal article
Physical and emotional stress have differential effects on preference for saccharine and open field behaviour in rats
FTA Pijlman, G Wolterink, JM Van Ree
Behavioural Brain Research | ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV | Published : 2003
Abstract
Stress may influence the sensitivity of subjects to rewarding stimuli and stress modality may differentially affect this sensitivity. This relation was investigated in our animal model using chronic physical (repeated mild foot shocks) and emotional (witness) stress. Previous research has established that the two stressors have differential long-term effects on behaviour, where physical stress caused inactivity in a small open field and emotional stress hyperactivity. Rats were stressed on 5 consecutive days and tested for locomotor activity in a small open field (day 10) and saccharine preference (day 11). The preference for graded concentrations of saccharine over water was used as a measu..
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