Avoidance Expression in Rats as a Function of Signal-Shock Interval: Strain and Sex Differences
Inbred Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats express inhibited temperament, increased sensitivity to stress, and exaggerated expressions of avoidance. A long-standing observation for lever press escape/avoidance learning in rats is the duration of the warning signal (WS) determines whether avoidance is expressed...
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doaj-0e9bff2fee7a466b9de9311c9d07909d2020-11-24T21:07:34ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience1662-51532015-07-01910.3389/fnbeh.2015.00168146004Avoidance Expression in Rats as a Function of Signal-Shock Interval: Strain and Sex DifferencesRichard J Servatius0Richard J Servatius1Richard J Servatius2Pelin eAvcu3Pelin eAvcu4Nora eKo5Nora eKo6Xilu eJiao7Kevin D Beck8Kevin D Beck9Kevin D Beck10Thomas R Minor11Kevin CH Pang12Kevin CH Pang13Kevin CH Pang14Syracuse DVA Medical CenterRutgers Biomedical Health SciencesGraduate School of Biomedical SciencesGraduate School of Biomedical SciencesVA-New Jersey Health Care SystemGraduate School of Biomedical SciencesVA-New Jersey Health Care SystemVA-New Jersey Health Care SystemRutgers Biomedical Health SciencesGraduate School of Biomedical SciencesVA-New Jersey Health Care SystemUniversity of California at Los AngelesRutgers Biomedical Health SciencesGraduate School of Biomedical SciencesVA-New Jersey Health Care SystemInbred Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats express inhibited temperament, increased sensitivity to stress, and exaggerated expressions of avoidance. A long-standing observation for lever press escape/avoidance learning in rats is the duration of the warning signal (WS) determines whether avoidance is expressed over escape. Outbred female Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats trained with a 10-s WS efficiently escaped, but failed to exhibit avoidance; avoidance was exhibited to a high degree with WSs longer than 20-s. We examined this longstanding WS duration function and extended it to male SD and male and female WKY rats. A cross-over design with two WS durations (10 s or 60 s) was employed. Rats were trained (20 trials/session) in four phases: acquisition (10 sessions), extinction (10 sessions), re-acquisition (8 sessions) and re-extinction (8 sessions). Consistent with the literature, female and male SD rats failed to express avoidance to an appreciable degree with a 10-s WS. When these rats were switched to a 60-s WS, performance levels in the initial session of training resembled the peak performance of rats trained with a 60-s WS. Therefore, the avoidance relationship was acquired, but not expressed at 10-s WS. Further, poor avoidance at 10-s does not adversely affect expression at 60-s. Failure to express avoidance with a 10-s WS likely reflects contrasting reinforcement value of avoidance, not a reduction in the amount of time available to respond or competing responses. In contrast, WKY rats exhibited robust avoidance with a 10-s WS, which was most apparent in female WKY rats. Exaggerated expression of avoidances by WKY rats, especially female rats, further confirms this inbred strain as a model of anxiety vulnerability.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00168/fullAnxiety DisordersAvoidance LearningMotivationShockTemperamentExtinction learning |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Richard J Servatius Richard J Servatius Richard J Servatius Pelin eAvcu Pelin eAvcu Nora eKo Nora eKo Xilu eJiao Kevin D Beck Kevin D Beck Kevin D Beck Thomas R Minor Kevin CH Pang Kevin CH Pang Kevin CH Pang |
spellingShingle |
Richard J Servatius Richard J Servatius Richard J Servatius Pelin eAvcu Pelin eAvcu Nora eKo Nora eKo Xilu eJiao Kevin D Beck Kevin D Beck Kevin D Beck Thomas R Minor Kevin CH Pang Kevin CH Pang Kevin CH Pang Avoidance Expression in Rats as a Function of Signal-Shock Interval: Strain and Sex Differences Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience Anxiety Disorders Avoidance Learning Motivation Shock Temperament Extinction learning |
author_facet |
Richard J Servatius Richard J Servatius Richard J Servatius Pelin eAvcu Pelin eAvcu Nora eKo Nora eKo Xilu eJiao Kevin D Beck Kevin D Beck Kevin D Beck Thomas R Minor Kevin CH Pang Kevin CH Pang Kevin CH Pang |
author_sort |
Richard J Servatius |
title |
Avoidance Expression in Rats as a Function of Signal-Shock Interval: Strain and Sex Differences |
title_short |
Avoidance Expression in Rats as a Function of Signal-Shock Interval: Strain and Sex Differences |
title_full |
Avoidance Expression in Rats as a Function of Signal-Shock Interval: Strain and Sex Differences |
title_fullStr |
Avoidance Expression in Rats as a Function of Signal-Shock Interval: Strain and Sex Differences |
title_full_unstemmed |
Avoidance Expression in Rats as a Function of Signal-Shock Interval: Strain and Sex Differences |
title_sort |
avoidance expression in rats as a function of signal-shock interval: strain and sex differences |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience |
issn |
1662-5153 |
publishDate |
2015-07-01 |
description |
Inbred Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats express inhibited temperament, increased sensitivity to stress, and exaggerated expressions of avoidance. A long-standing observation for lever press escape/avoidance learning in rats is the duration of the warning signal (WS) determines whether avoidance is expressed over escape. Outbred female Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats trained with a 10-s WS efficiently escaped, but failed to exhibit avoidance; avoidance was exhibited to a high degree with WSs longer than 20-s. We examined this longstanding WS duration function and extended it to male SD and male and female WKY rats. A cross-over design with two WS durations (10 s or 60 s) was employed. Rats were trained (20 trials/session) in four phases: acquisition (10 sessions), extinction (10 sessions), re-acquisition (8 sessions) and re-extinction (8 sessions). Consistent with the literature, female and male SD rats failed to express avoidance to an appreciable degree with a 10-s WS. When these rats were switched to a 60-s WS, performance levels in the initial session of training resembled the peak performance of rats trained with a 60-s WS. Therefore, the avoidance relationship was acquired, but not expressed at 10-s WS. Further, poor avoidance at 10-s does not adversely affect expression at 60-s. Failure to express avoidance with a 10-s WS likely reflects contrasting reinforcement value of avoidance, not a reduction in the amount of time available to respond or competing responses. In contrast, WKY rats exhibited robust avoidance with a 10-s WS, which was most apparent in female WKY rats. Exaggerated expression of avoidances by WKY rats, especially female rats, further confirms this inbred strain as a model of anxiety vulnerability. |
topic |
Anxiety Disorders Avoidance Learning Motivation Shock Temperament Extinction learning |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00168/full |
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