Abstract

An olfactory conditioning paradigm tested whether newborn rats can acquire a conditioned aversion to olfactory events associated with their first postnatal meal 3-5 hr after birth. Exposure to lemon odor (conditioned stimulus [CS]) paired with intraoral infusions of 0.1% quinine (unconditioned stimulus) resulted in explicit conditioning. Responsiveness to a surrogate nipple providing water in the presence of the CS was significantly lower than the 3 control conditions. The conditioning dramatically suppressed responsiveness to a surrogate nipple providing milk, which normally is expressed voraciously in terms of sustained nipple attachment and milk intake. These findings suggest that as early as 3-5 hr after birth newborn rats are capable of aversive conditioning to odors in the context of suckling behavior.

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