Abstract

Sternberg introduced the additive factor method as a tool for discovering and studying in choice reaction time situations in human subjects. Underlying the method is the notion that if information processing consists of successive stages, then different factors affecting different stages must have additive effects on reaction-time measurements. The additive factor method has been extensively used in humans but few attempts have been made to examine whether or not additive reaction time patterns were obtainable in rats. In the present work, the subjects (13 Long–Evans rats) had to press down a lever and to respond to a visual (right or left) stimulus by releasing the lever and introducing the head into a lateral (right or left) operandum. The present findings show an additive pattern of effects of signal luminance and foreperiod duration on the mean reaction time which suggests that we have successfully manipulated two stages of rat information processing — the preprocessing stage and the motor adjustment stage, respectively. Accordingly, the present study sets the basis for the basis for investigating the effects of invasive manipulations (pharmacological and/or lesional) on information processing stages.

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