The effects of sexual experience and estrus on male-seeking motivated behavior in the female rat |
| |
Authors: | Nofrey Barbara Rocha Beatriz Lopez Hassan H Ettenberg Aaron |
| |
Affiliation: | a Behavioral Pharmacology Laboratory, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9660, United States b Merck & Co., Inc., P.O. Box 2000, Rahway, New Jersey 07065, United States c Department of Psychology, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866, United States |
| |
Abstract: | Ovariectomized (OVX) female rats were trained to traverse a straight alley and return to a goal box where they had previously encountered a male rat, a female rat or an empty goal box. The time required to run the alley was used as an index of the subjects' motivation to re-engage the goal box target. Subjects were tested in both estrus and non-estrus, first sexually naïve and then again after sexual experience. Female rats ran most quickly for a male target, most slowly for an empty goal box, and at intermediate speeds for a female target. Sexual experience tended to slow run times for all but male targets. Estrus enhanced approach behavior for males and an empty goal box, but tended to slow the approach toward females, both before and after sexual experience. This latter finding was further investigated in a second experiment in which sexually naïve OVX females were tested during estrus and non-estrus in a locomotor activity apparatus, a runway with an empty goal box, and an open field. Estrus produced no changes in spontaneous locomotion either in the activity box or the open field, but decreased run times in the alley and increased the number of center-square entries in the open-field. Thus, estrus produces increases in sexual motivation that selectively enhance exploratory, presumably male-seeking behavior, but not simple spontaneous locomotion. |
| |
Keywords: | Sexual motivation Runway Female rats Sexual experience Copulation Estrus Progesterone Estrogen |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|