Approach behavior toward male and female incentives was studied in male laboratory rats during development from prepuberty to adulthood. Both incentives were approached, but the magnitude of the response changed with age. At 70 days of age, the typical adult approach response was evident: The female was contacted for the better part of a session, and the male incentive was contacted very little. The time for the appearance of this contact response was not obviously influenced by prepuberal experience in intact males or by the presence of gonadal hormones in neonatally castrated males. However, the magnitude of the preference for the female appeared to be affected by such treatment.
It has been postulated that certain schizophrenic patients are in a state of continual central excitation and that improvement in these patients after treatment with chlorpromazine is a result of the action of the drug in reducing this excitation. A model was developed to test this postulated state of central excitation. Rats were electrically stimulated in the mesencephalic reticular formation while performing a simple attention task. Stimulation or treatment with chlorpromazine impaired the performance of the animals; however, the two treatments together resulted in performance indistinguishable from that seen after injections of saline alone.
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