To identify variables that underlie intuitive judgments about the sizes of groups of similar objects, we asked people to judge the relative heights of vertical bars briefly shown, two groups at a time, on a computer display. Randomly selected normal deviates determined individual bar height. Average differences in height and group sizes were also randomly varied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe flash-lag effect is a visual illusion wherein intermittently flashed, stationary stimuli seem to trail after a moving visual stimulus despite being flashed synchronously. We tested hypotheses that the flash-lag effect is due to spatial extrapolation, shortened perceptual lags, or accelerated acquisition of moving stimuli, all of which call for an earlier awareness of moving visual stimuli over stationary ones. Participants judged synchrony of a click either to a stationary flash of light or to a series of adjacent flashes that seemingly bounced off or bumped into the edge of the visual display.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the present work, we investigated the short- and long-term effects of a single systemic injection of rat recombinant interleukin-2 on weight, food intake, and brain stimulation reward thresholds elicited from the ventral tegmental area. An inverted U-shaped dose-function was obtained with 0.5 microg producing the greatest increases in the threshold for rewarding brain stimulation which were sustained during the month long tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe amygdaloid complex is one of the structures thought to modulate brain stimulation reward (BSR) elicited from the median forebrain bundle (MFB). Previous metabolic and behavioral data from our laboratory point to the amygdaloid cortical nuclei as key to this process. In this study, thresholds for rewarding stimulation of the MFB were determined for 42 days, 21 days following an electrolytic lesion to amygdaloid nuclei ipsilateral to the stimulation electrode, and 21 days following one applied to the contralateral amygdala.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe chronic mild stress (CMS) procedure was developed in rodents to target anhedonia, the core symptom of depressive melancholia. Stress exposure has been shown to induce a variety of physiological, biochemical and behavioral alterations associated with depression, although its anhedonic consequences as indexed by either sucrose intake and preference or thresholds for brain stimulation reward are less reliably observed. In the present study, we assessed the effects of six weeks of CMS on the latter measure in two strains of male and female rats subsequently challenged with an acute psychophysical stressor, forced swimming; their behavior in the swimming cylinder was evaluated on two consecutive days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF