Mutual facilitation between activity-based anorexia and schedule-induced polydipsia in rats
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2023-01-05
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Springer
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The objective of this study was to evaluate the possible relationship between drinking (licks) in the schedule-induced
polydipsia (SIP) phenomenon and running (turns in the wheel) in the activity-based anorexia (ABA) one. Within-subjects
counterbalanced experiments were designed with male Wistar rats which underwent both behavioral procedures; half of
them performed the ABA procedure first and the other half the SIP procedure first. In Experiment 1, the initial development
of ABA facilitated the subsequent acquisition of SIP, whereas the first acquisition of SIP retarded the subsequent development
of ABA. Given that SIP exposure implied food restriction, it could be that adaptation to the food regime contributed
to lowering ABA manifestation. Thus, Experiment 2 was carried out in exactly the same way as Experiment 1, with the
exception that animals which first went through SIP prior to undergoing the ABA procedure had no food restriction. In this
case, both ABA and SIP as first experiences facilitated the further development of SIP and ABA, respectively. This suggests
that running in ABA may be functionally similar to drinking in SIP; therefore, both behaviors can be thought of as induced
by the schedule/regime of intermittent food availability.
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Labajos, M.J., Calcagni, G. & Pellón, R. Mutual facilitation between activity-based anorexia and schedule-induced polydipsia in rats. Learn Behav 51, 502–520 (2023). https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-022-00560-2