Abstract: | 24 Long-Evans hooded rats lacking gustatory neocortex and 24 normal rats were familiarized to either hydrochloric acid or quinine hydrochloride solutions during free-drinking trials. Ss were subsequently trained to avoid either the familiar or the novel taste stimulus, using a balanced design, by pairing the to-be-associated taste with ip injections of apomorphine hydrochloride. Balanced, nonpaired presentations of the other taste solution and water were also presented. Normal Ss learned to avoid the novel taste more efficiently than the familiar taste. Ss with gustatory neocortex lesions did not differentiate novel from familiar tastes. They learned aversions to both in a manner highly similar to the aversion learning of familiar tastes by the normal group. Therefore, results demonstrate that Ss lacking gustatory neocortex displayed an associative deficiency only when they were trained on novel stimuli. This suggests that gustatory neocortex lesions disrupt the conditionability of taste stimuli by reducing or eliminating responses to taste novelty. This interpretation is supported by the absence of a "neophobic" response in the lesioned rats to the first presentation of a taste stimulus. (26 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |