Abstract
In four experiments using rat subjects, we investigated the effects of presenting a novel flavor cue at the time of pairing an environmental context with illness. In each experiment, the subjects were allowed to spend time in a distinctive cage before receiving an injection of LiCl. For some, plain water was made available on these conditioning trials; for others, a novel taste (HCl) was presented. We measured the strength of the context aversion by assessing the ability of the contextual cues to block the acquisition of an aversion to sucrose in a further phase of training. We found that initial training with HCl present made the context less effective as a blocking cue and concluded that the HCl had overshadowed learning about the context. We suggest that this blocking procedure provides a more accurate assessment of contextual aversion than does the consumption test that has more usually been used and that taste-context overshadowing may be a more robust phenomenon than has thus far been thought.
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This work was supported by a grant from the Wellcome Trust. We thank C. Bonardi, C. Mitchell, and M. Rodríguez for their help.
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Symonds, M., Hall, G. Overshadowing not potentiation of illness-based contextual conditioning by a novel taste. Animal Learning & Behavior 27, 379–390 (1999). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209975
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209975