Elsevier

Physiology & Behavior

Volume 10, Issue 6, June 1973, Pages 1035-1039
Physiology & Behavior

Latency and amplitude changes in the acoustic startle reflex of the rat produced by variation in auditory prestimulation

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Abstract

Two experiments investigated the effect of an auditory prestimulus (S1) on the amplitude and latency of the startle reflex to an intense tone burst (S2). In the first, with a fixed S1 intensity, with very short (<15 msec) ISIs reflex amplitudes were increased and latencies reduced by S1 presence and with longer intervals (⩾40 msec) amplitudes were reduced and latencies increased. Inhibition was apparent on the amplitude measure at lag times ineffective in altering the latency measure. In the second, with a fixed and long S1 duration reflex amplitudes increased with an increase in S1 intensity up to moderate (≈75 db) levels, but further increases in S1 produced a reduction in amplitudes. However any increase in S1 intensity over the minimum value tested (60 db) resulted in an increment in reflex latency. These experiments reveal the presence of three separable influences of auditory prestimuli on the acoustic startle reflex in the rat.

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This research was supported by NIH (NINDS NS08456) and NSF (GB14814).

∗∗

G. R. Hammond is now at that University of Western Australia.

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