Abstract: | Investigation and urine-marking responses of 112 male and female Long-Evans rats toward conspecific urine odors were recorded in pair-wise comparison tests. Each of 16 S groups was given 15 preference tests, 1 for each of the possible pairs of 5 urine odors and a no-odor control (N). The urine sources were own group (G), intact male (M), castrated male (Mc), ovariectomized female (Fo), and estrous females (F). Results were scaled by using a technique based on L. L. Thurstone's (1927) law of comparative judgment. Intact males with sexual experience ordered their odor preferences N? |