Abstract

Newborn rat pups tested before suckling experience attached to and ingested milk from the surrogate nipple. Time attached to the nipple and amount of milk ingested depended on the schedule of milk infusion through the nipple. More frequent milk infusions resulted in more frequent disengagements from the nipple during the test, less time attached to the nipple, and less body weight gain. The initial patterns of attachment behavior--continuous or intermittent--were reproduced later when rats were tested on the surrogate nipple. Preloading of the stomach with milk effectively altered both attachment and ingestion from the nipple, whereas preloading with the same amount of water had no effect on suckling behavior. The data suggest that newborn rats flexibly adjust their attachment behavior to peculiarities of milk delivery through the surrogate nipple and reproduce the initial attachment pattern when reexposed to the surrogate nipple.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call