Rats were reduced to 80 percent body weight and were exposed to an FI 1 min food reinforcement schedule for 30 min daily until lever presses, licks and water consumption stabilized for at least 10 days. Six animals were subjected to bilateral mid lateral hypothalamic (LH) lesions and 6 animals to bilateral posterior LH lesions. Animals were tested for 50 days following the lesions at 80 percent body weight, were permitted to recover body weight, and were tested for an additional 30 days under ad lib feeding and after body weight recovered. Animals were then subjected to the following four home cage tests: food consumption following food deprivation; drinking following water deprivation; insulin induced eating; and salt arousal of drinking. On the basis of the data collected in these tests and lesion locus and size, the 12 experimental animals were divided into 3 groups--asymmetrical, typical and posterior bilateral LH lesion and were compared to a sham lesion control group of 4 animals. The asymmetrical LH lesion group was similar to the sham lesion group except lever pressing was significantly depressed. Typical bilateral lesion animals displayed the usual LH syndrome with prolonged depression of both schedule dependent lever pressing and schedule induced licking and drinking. Posterior bilateral LH lesions produced the most drastic effects on both schedule dependent and schedule induced behavior. Results indicate that the neural mechanism which is involved in schedule induced polydipsia is destroyed by posterior bilateral LH lesions.