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RESPONSE LATENCIES OF NORMAL AND FOCAL-HEAD IRRADIATED MONKEYS
- Source :
- The Journal of genetic psychology. 103
- Publication Year :
- 1963
-
Abstract
- This study was designed to determine whether focal-head irradiated rhesus monkeys differ from normal monkeys in a manner analogous to that previously found in whole-body irradiated monkeys with respect to response latencies under both familiar and novel stimulus conditions. Five control and four focal-head irradiated rhesus monkeys with nearly identical training histories were used; the latter were survivors of a focal-head irradiation study conducted four years earlier. They had received 3000 r x radiation to the inferior parietal lobule and posterior aspect of the temporal lobe of the brain, and 30 days later the same dosage to the same area of the brain. The testing was conducted in a modified version of the Wisconsin General Test Apparatus, with 24 trials per day for two days, on response latency to a single food-rewarded wooden block placed randomly over either of the two extreme food-well positions. Then, 24 trials were conducted per day for two days on response latency to either the same food-rewarded wooden block or to a novel nonrewarded wooden block presented simultaneously. On the single-block condition, median response latencies of the two groups were comparable and the groups improved in a similar manner with practice. Optimal performance latencies weremore » also comparable for the two groups. When the novel nonrewarded stimulus block was introduced, both groups manifested comparable disruption of median response latencies, but disruption of optimal response latencies was shown only by the focalhead irradiated group. The findings show that monkeys with previous focal-head irradiation of the posterior association areas, unlike relatively high-dose whole-body irradiated monkeys, manifest median response latencies comparable to those of controls. These data indicate the lasting effects of focal-head irradiation with x rays, and suggest that the sites of permanent damage for monkeys given sublethal whole-body radiation exposure differ from the sites irradiated in the present subjects. (BBB)« less
- Subjects :
- Behavior, Animal
Research
Physiology
Brain
Inferior parietal lobule
Haplorhini
Stimulus (physiology)
Temporal lobe
Radiation exposure
Radiation Effects
Clinical Psychology
Wisconsin General Test Apparatus
Conditioning, Psychological
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Reaction Time
Animals
Humans
Irradiation
Life-span and Life-course Studies
Psychology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00221325
- Volume :
- 103
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of genetic psychology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5f2eaec4fb2654a71438625749d606d5