Artículos de revistas
Learned helplessness in the rat: Effect of response topography in a within-subject design
Fecha
2011Registro en:
BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES, v.86, n.2, p.178-183, 2011
0376-6357
10.1016/j.beproc.2010.11.005
Autor
SANTOS, Cristiano Valerio dos
GEHM, Tauane
HUNZIKER, Maria Helena Leite
Institución
Resumen
Three experiments investigated learned helplessness in rats manipulating response topography within-subject and different intervals between treatment and tests among groups. In Experiment 1, rats previously exposed to inescapable shocks were tested under an escape contingency where either jumping or nose poking was required to terminate shocks: tests were run either 1, 14 or 28 days after treatment. Most rats failed to jump, as expected, but learned to nose poke, regardless of the interval between treatment and tests and order of testing. The same results were observed in male and female rats from a different laboratory (Experiment 2) and despite increased exposure to the escape contingencies using a within-subject design (Experiment 3). Furthermore, no evidence of helplessness reversal was observed, since animals failed to jump even after having learned to nose-poke in a previous test session. These results are not consistent with a learned helplessness hypothesis, which claims that shock (un)controllability is the key variable responsible for the effect. They are nonetheless consistent with the view that inescapable shocks enhance control by irrelevant features of the relationship between the environment and behavior. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.