Effects of a Change in Tone Frequency on the Habituated Orienting Response of the Sleeping Rat |
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Authors: | Marga Johnen Hans-Ulrich Schnitzler |
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Affiliation: | Lehrbereich Zoophysiologie, Institut für Biologie III, Universität Tübingen, Federal Republic of Germany |
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Abstract: | EEG arousal and heart rate responses to change in tone frequency following habituation training were studied during slow wave sleep in the rat. Rats were exposed to sequences of 12 tone pulses. Habituation stimuli (trials 1-7) had a frequency of 16 kHz. The frequency of the following (test) trials was changed to either 5, 12, 14, 22, or 40 kHz. Hearing level was held constant for all frequencies. Test trials were repeated five times to study rehabituation. The results indicate that heart rate deceleration is an indicator of the orienting reflex and its magnitude is a positive function of the amount of frequency change of the stimulus. Large frequency changes in either direction relative to the habituation frequency lead to re-evocation of the habituated EEG arousal and heart rate deceleration, with subsequent rehabituation. Small tone-frequency changes do not result in EEG arousal or heart rate deceleration responses that differ from the responses to the habituated frequency. Heart rate acceleration shows neither short-term habituation nor significant reaction to any of the test frequencies. |
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Keywords: | Heart rate Cortical arousal Habituation Sleep Orienting response Rat Auditory stimulation |
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