Abstract
Rats were trained to work for radiant heat in a cold environment in an apparatus that permitted the simultaneous measurement of metabolic heat production. Reductions in behavioral efficacy produced either by a decrease in reward duration or intensity or by an increase in response effort resulted in a reduction in behavioral heat intake, an increase in metabolic heat production, and no change in body temperature. Thus, autonomic and behavioral temperature regulation interact to produce a constant body temperature.
Published Version
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