Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9406419 | Behavioural Brain Research | 2005 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The present study shows that repetitive presentation of tactile and acoustic stimuli evoke long-term habituation (LTH) of the startle response in C57Â BL/6J mice. This was indicated by a decrease in response strength over several days. For the LTH of the acoustic startle response two controls were included: first, developing hearing loss during the time of testing did not account for the startle decrease-only 7 days of acoustic stimulation but not 7 days of adaptation led to a decrease in the startle. Second, repetitive presentation of loud acoustic startle stimuli did not raise the auditory threshold, which might otherwise have accounted for the startle decrease: prepulse inhibition (used here as a hearing test) was identical after both 7 days of acoustic startle stimulation and 7 days without stimulation. This proves that LTH to tactile and acoustic stimuli is present and fully functional in mice.
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Authors
Claudia F. Plappert, Peter K.D. Pilz,