Bos Ruud van den, Meijer Margot K, van Renselaar Jaline P, van der Harst Johanneke E, Spruijt Berry M
Ethology and Animal Welfare, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Yalelaan 17, NL-3584 CL Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Behav Brain Res. 2003 Apr 17;141(1):83-9. doi: 10.1016/s0166-4328(02)00318-2.
In rats (Rattus norvegicus) anticipation to an oncoming food reward in an appetitive Pavlovian conditioning procedure is expressed as an increase of behavioural transitions, i.e. hyperactivity. This behaviour might be related to the spontaneous appetitive behaviour of animals in relation to oncoming food rewards. To deepen our insight into anticipatory behaviour we decided to study anticipation in rats and cats (Felis silvestris catus) using the same paradigm, as they show different types of spontaneous appetitive behaviour in relation to oncoming food rewards: 'search behaviour' and 'sit-and-wait behaviour' respectively. Using exactly the same Pavlovian conditioning paradigm in rats and cats it turned out that individuals of both species learned the association between conditioned stimulus (CS) (a tone) and unconditioned stimulus (US) (a food reward) as judged by their conditioned approach to the food dispenser. However, rats showed an increase in behavioural transitions whereas as cats a decrease during the 3 min interval between the offset of the CS and the onset of the US. Under extinction conditions the number of transitions of the rats decreased towards that of controls, whereas that of cats increased towards that of controls. This suggests that the same internal psychological process-anticipation to a coming reward-leads to different anticipatory behaviour in different species.
在大鼠(褐家鼠)中,在经典性条件反射程序中对即将到来的食物奖励的预期表现为行为转换增加,即多动。这种行为可能与动物相对于即将到来的食物奖励的自发食欲行为有关。为了更深入地了解预期行为,我们决定使用相同的范式研究大鼠和猫(家猫)的预期行为,因为它们在相对于即将到来的食物奖励时表现出不同类型的自发食欲行为:分别为“搜索行为”和“坐等行为”。在大鼠和猫中使用完全相同的经典性条件反射范式,结果发现,根据它们对食物分配器的条件性接近程度判断,两个物种的个体都学会了条件刺激(CS)(一种音调)和无条件刺激(US)(一种食物奖励)之间的关联。然而,在CS结束到US开始的3分钟间隔期间,大鼠的行为转换增加,而猫的行为转换减少。在消退条件下,大鼠的转换次数向对照组减少,而猫的转换次数向对照组增加。这表明相同的内部心理过程——对即将到来的奖励的预期——在不同物种中导致不同的预期行为。