The Effects of Sex and Chronic Restraint on Instrumental Learning in Rats

Author:

McDowell Angela L.123,Heath Kathryn M.1,Garraghty Preston E.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA

2. Program in Neuroscience, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA

3. Postdoctoral Associate, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, 628 NW MUH, 3459 5th Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA

Abstract

Chronic stress has been shown to impact learning, but studies have been sparse or nonexistent examining sex or task differences. We examined the effects of sex and chronic stress on instrumental learning in adult rats. Rats were tested in an aversive paradigm with or without prior appetitive experience, and daily body weight data was collected as an index of stress. Relative to control animals, reduced body weight was maintained across the stress period for males (−7%, P.05) and females (−5%, P.05). For males, there were within-subject day-by-day differences after asymptotic transition, and all restrained males were delayed in reaching asymptotic performance. In contrast, stressed females were facilitated in appetitive and aversive-only instrumental learning but impaired during acquisition of the aversive transfer task. Males were faster than females in reaching the appetitive shaping criterion, but females were more efficient in reaching the appetitive tone-signaled criterion. Finally, an effect of task showed that while females reached aversive shaping criterion at a faster rate when they had prior appetitive learning, they were impaired in tone-signaled avoidance learning only when they had prior appetitive learning. These tasks reveal important nuances on the effect of stress and sex differences on goal-directed behavior.

Funder

Indiana University

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Fuel Technology

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