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Analysis of the relationships between self-stimulation sniffing and brain-stimulation sniffing
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Analysis of the relationships between self-stimulation sniffing and brain-stimulation sniffing

John Rossi and Jaak Panksepp
Physiology & behavior, Vol.51(4), pp.805-813
1992
PMID: 1594679

Abstract

Electrically elicited sniffing Food deprivation Self-stimulation Threshold analysis
Determination of current thresholds for self-stimulation and electrically elicited sniffing from electrodes placed into lateral hypothalamic and ventral tegmental areas of rats revealed a tight correlative relationship between the two phenomena ( r values of approx 0.9 at both sites). Thresholds for sniffing were never higher than those for self-stimulation, while approximately half the animals had higher self-stimulation than sniffing thresholds, suggesting that electrically elicited sniffing may better index the underlying psychobiological process that mediates self-stimulation. That both phenomena reflect the same basic process was suggested by the fact that 48 h of food deprivation consistently reduced the thresholds for both self-stimulation and sniffing, while 24 h of food deprivation had only marginal effects on both. The implications for understanding the nature of self-stimulation processes is discussed.

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