Attenuation of gastric lesions by psychological aspects of aggression in rats. |
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Authors: | Weiss, Jay M. Pohorecky, Larissa A. Salmon, Sherry Gruenthal, Michael |
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Abstract: | In a study with 80 male albino rats, Ss that fought with each other in response to electric shock showed reduced gastric lesions in comparison with Ss that received the same shocks alone so that fighting behavior did not occur. Also, gastric lesions were similarly reduced in Ss that fought even though they could not physically contact one another because of a barrier between them. In this case, the "protective" effect of fighting derived from the release or display of fighting behavior and did not require physical combat. A 2nd experiment with 48 rats showed that Ss that received shock together but did not engage in fighting behavior showed no reduction of gastric lesions, so that the protective effect of fighting was not an artifact of Ss receiving shock together. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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