1976
DOI: 10.1037/h0077224
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Ontogeny of defensive reactions in Norway rats.

Abstract: Young rats of several ages were presented with stimuli (a caged domestic cat, a footshock, and a suddenly moving object) known to be aversive to adults and disruptive of behavior in mature animals. Twenty-day-old rats were relatively unaffected by these events, while rats aged 30 days and older tended to reduce their locomotion and freeze upon the presentation of these cues. These data are consistent with Bolles' hypothesis that shockelicited responses are innate defensive reactions. We also suggest that the i… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
(42 reference statements)
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“…Numerous studies have been conducted to assess the effects of the presence of a natural predator (e.g., Blanchard & Blanchard, 1971;Blanchard, Mast, & Blanchard, 1975;Bronstein & Hirsch, 1976;Curti, 1935;Griffith, 1920;Hofer, 1970;Price, 1970;Satinder, 1976) or a human (Gallup & Suarez, 1980) on activity patterns in several species. All of these studies report that behaviors that minimize detectability (i.e., inhibition of movement and vocalization) are enhanced when either a predator or a human is present.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Numerous studies have been conducted to assess the effects of the presence of a natural predator (e.g., Blanchard & Blanchard, 1971;Blanchard, Mast, & Blanchard, 1975;Bronstein & Hirsch, 1976;Curti, 1935;Griffith, 1920;Hofer, 1970;Price, 1970;Satinder, 1976) or a human (Gallup & Suarez, 1980) on activity patterns in several species. All of these studies report that behaviors that minimize detectability (i.e., inhibition of movement and vocalization) are enhanced when either a predator or a human is present.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We found a continuous increase in oligodendrocyte numbers in all amygdala nuclei from 4 weeks to 7 months of age, a period that coincides with significant changes in defensive behaviors. Indeed, 50-day-old rats are more attentive and display longer freezing, at a greater distance from the threat, than 20-day-old rats (Bronstein and Hirsch, 1976). In contrast, although 4-week-old mice exhibit more rapid and more robust acquisition of a conditioned association between an auditory stimulus and a foot shock compared with 6-8-week-old mice (Hefner and Holmes, 2007), other studies have shown that 4-week-old mice also display excessive generalization to auditory conditioned stimuli compared with 9-10-week-old mice .…”
Section: Functional Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Individual components of the fear response are thought to incorporate sequentially as animals mature, eventually giving rise to what are identified as mature fear behaviors (Wiedenmayer, 2009). Indeed, several studies have revealed that distinct fear behaviors emerge at different times during early postnatal life and continue to mature during late postnatal development (Blozovski and Cudennec, 1980;Bronstein and Hirsch, 1976;Chen et al, 2006;Collier et al, 1979;Foster and Burman, 2010;Hefner and Holmes, 2007;Hubbard et al, 2004;Ito et al, 2009;Kim and Richardson, 2007;Moriceau et al, 2004;Raineki et al, 2010;Rudy, 1993;Takahashi, 1992;Wiedenmayer andBarr, 1998, 2001a,b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In adults, these behaviors have been shown to be inhibited in the presence of a threatening stimulus (Blanchard and Blanchard 1989;Blanchard et al 1990). This inhibition of ongoing behavior in response to threat is also seen in pups as they transition to independence around weaning (Bronstein and Hirsch 1976), and includes reduced play (Siviy et al 2006).…”
mentioning
confidence: 95%