Poison-avoidance learning to food-related tactile stimuli: Avoidance of texture cues by rats

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Abstract

Rats injected with lithium chloride after ingesting familiar food pellets presented in textured metal sleeves learned aversions to the sleeved food. In a choice between sleeved and unsleeved food, the aversions were evident following conditioning with toxicosis delayed as long as 120 min after exposure to the sleeved food (Experiment 1). Texture-specific aversions resulted from procedures in which rats were exposed to food in both rough- and smooth-textured sleeves but were injected with lithium only in conjunction with one of the textures (Experiments 2-4). This differential aversion learning occurred when lithium treatment was delayed 30 min after exposure to the sleeved food (Experiments 3 and 4) and was equally evident in rats conditioned and tested in total darkness or in normal room-level illumination (Experiment 4). However, differential texture aversion learning was not observed with 90- or 300-min delayed toxicosis (Experiment 3). The present experiments highlight the importance of tactile cues in the poison-avoidance learning of species that handle their food during the course of ingestion. © 1982 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Domjan, M., & Hanlon, M. J. (1982). Poison-avoidance learning to food-related tactile stimuli: Avoidance of texture cues by rats. Animal Learning & Behavior, 10(3), 293–300. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03213713

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