The US-preexposure effect in honeybees

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Abstract

Signaled avoidance was studied in individual honeybees that visited the laboratory regularly to take sucrose solution from a target set on the sill of an open window. During feeding, substrate vibration or airstream was used to signal a brief shock that could be avoided by breaking off contact with the food for a few seconds. Aversive conditioning of the context was measured in terms of return time (the time between successive visits). In Experiment 1, experience with unsignaled shock was found to lengthen return time-which experience with signaled shock did not-and to impair performance in subsequent avoidance training with signaled shock (the US-preexposure effect). In Experiment 2, experience with unsignaled shock given after signaled avoidance training lengthened return time but had no effect on response to the signal in a subsequent extinction test. These results closely resemble the results obtained in analogous experiments with vertebrates. © 1986 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Abramson, C. I., & Bitterman, M. E. (1986). The US-preexposure effect in honeybees. Animal Learning & Behavior, 14(4), 374–379. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03200081

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