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Article
Taste, Olfactory and Trigeminal Neophobia in Rats with Forebrain Lesions
Brain Research
  • Jian-You Lin
  • Christopher T. Roman, Butler University
  • Justin St. Andre
  • Steve Reilly
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2009
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2008.11.040
Abstract

The present study was designed to examine whether lesions of the insular cortex (IC; Experiment 1), the basolateral amygdala (BLA) or medial amygdala (MeA; Experiment 2) influence the neophobic reactions to orally consumed liquid stimuli. Three different types of stimuli were used: taste (0.5% saccharin), olfactory (0.1% amyl acetate), and trigeminal (0.01 mM capsaicin). Rats with IC, BLA and MeA lesions showed normal responses to the olfactory and trigeminal stimuli. Each type of lesion, however, disrupted the initial occurrence of neophobia to the taste stimulus. The significance of these findings to conditioned taste aversion is discussed.

Rights

This is a post-print version of an article originally published in Brain Research, 2009, Volume 1251, pp. 195-203.

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The version of record is available through: Elsevier.

Citation Information
Jian-You Lin, Christopher T. Roman, Justin St. Andre and Steve Reilly. "Taste, Olfactory and Trigeminal Neophobia in Rats with Forebrain Lesions" Brain Research Vol. 1251 (2009) p. 195 - 203
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/christopher-roman/16/