Effect of the septal lesion on the non-learned responses of the rat

Abstract
Effect of septal lesions has been studied in rats to find if they alter aspects of its SSDR. Results may be summarized as follows: 1. Animals with the septal syndrome tried to attack only when about to be caught, while they showed exaggerate freezing and submissive responses once caught. 2. A shock associated situation caused an increase in the freezing behavior and a decrease in the number of boluses excreted. 3. The septal animals never left walls of the open field, and did not explored its internal areas, showed in increase in thigmotaxis. 4. They showed an increase in the emergence time. The results are interpreted as due to an enhancement of the species-specific defence reactions.
Keywords:
Avoidance Learning, Behavior, Amygdala/physiology, Animal, Animals, Cerebral Ventricles/physiology, Conditioning, Efferent Pathways/physiology, Male, Operant, Rats, Species Specificity
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