Effects of response-independent stimuli on fixed-interval and fixed-ratio performance of rats: A model for stressful disruption of cyclical eating patterns

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Abstract

Binge eating is often associated with stressinduced disruption of typical eating patterns. Three experiments were performed with the aim of developing a potential model for this effect by investigating the effect of presenting response-independent stimuli on rats' lever-pressing for food reinforcement during both fixed-interval (FI) and fixed-ratio (FR) schedules of reinforcement. In Experiment 1, a response-independent brief tone (500-ms, 105-dB, broadband, noisy signal, ranging up to 16 kHz, with spectral peaks at 3 and 500 Hz) disrupted the performance on an FI 60-s schedule. Responding with the response-independent tone was more vigorous than in the absence of the tone. This effect was replicated in Experiment 2 using a within-subject design, but no such effect was noted when a light was employed as a disrupter. In Experiment 3, a 500-ms tone, but not a light, had a similar effect on rats' performance on FR schedules. This tone-induced effect may represent a release from response-inhibition produced by an aversive event. The implications of these results for modeling binge eating are discussed. © Psychonomic Society, Inc. 2011.

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Reed, P. (2011). Effects of response-independent stimuli on fixed-interval and fixed-ratio performance of rats: A model for stressful disruption of cyclical eating patterns. Learning and Behavior, 39(1), 27–35. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13420-010-0003-5

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