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Predictability, control, and the pituitary-adrenal response in rats.
Authors:Davis  Hank; Levine  Seymour
Abstract:Compared the effects of signaled and unsignaled shock on the pituitary-adrenal response of 68 male Long-Evans hooded rats. In Exp I, exposure to the 2 procedures yielded no difference in plasma corticosterone levels. In Exp II, the addition of a food-reinforced leverpressing baseline produced conditioned suppression in the signaled condition but no group difference in steroid values. To guard against steroid elevations produced by exposure to shock, blood samples in Exp III were obtained during brief test sessions prior to the occurrence of shock. The procedure resulted in a significant elevation in the steroid levels of the signaled shock group. In Exp IV, a within-Ss sampling procedure revealed that disparate group steroid values obtained earlier in the session had converged by the end of the test session. The final experiment produced the original failure to obtain a steroid difference due to predictability in the absence of a behavioral baseline. Results suggest that (a) the effects of predictability are largely seen in the temporal pattern of steroid elevations and not in their terminal values, (b) the effects of predictability on steroids are modulated by the availability of control, and (c) control is not confined to the stimulus that is being predicted. (36 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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