Scopolamine: Effects on fear or defense responses in the rat |
| |
Authors: | Sandra Mollenauer Rod Plotnik Paula Southwick |
| |
Affiliation: | San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182, USA |
| |
Abstract: | In previous research scopolamine reduced fear or defense responses of rats to a cat, and removal of the rats' olfactory bulbs had the same effect. This suggested that scopolamine might have affected defense responses by blocking olfactory perception of the stimulus cat. The present experiments studied this possibility and explored further the effects of scopolamine on defense responses of the hooded rat. In Experiments 1 rats treated with scopolamine were found to be responsive to olfactory cues from a cat. When cat smell, but not a cat, was present in the apparatus, scopolamine-treated rats showed a large and significant suppression of food consumption. In Experiment 2 the effects of scopolamine on defense responses were shown to be generalizable to an inanimate stimulus, mechanical robot. Scopolamine caused significantly less freezing and avoidance and significantly shorter latencies to drink in the presence of the robot. One of the primary findings of the present research is that scopolamine has now been shown to reduce the defensive response of freezing in a variety of stimulus situations. This finding was thought to have important implications for the literature relating anticholinergic drugs and avoidance behavior. |
| |
Keywords: | Scopolamine Defense response Fear response Anticholinergic drugs Avoidance behavior Bulbectomy |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|