AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous research found that male quail, after learning to associate a terry-cloth object with a live female, copulated more with the terry-cloth during extinction trials, raising questions about why this happened.
  • The study involved 57 male quail and identified two responses: those who only approached the cloth and those who also engaged in copulation with it.
  • The results showed that quail not exposed to a female during extinction displayed increased copulatory behavior with the cloth, suggesting that lack of a live female led to compulsive responses, highlighting potential insights into paraphilias and compulsive sexual behaviors.

Article Abstract

Previous experiments showed that following acquisition of an association between a terry-cloth object conditioned stimulus (CS) and a live female unconditioned stimulus (US), male quail increased the frequency of their copulations with the inanimate CS during subsequent CS-alone (extinction) trials. The present experiment was conducted to identify the potential factors responsible for this unexpected increase in conditioned sexual behavior during extinction. A total of 57 naïve male quail were given pairings of a terry-cloth CS with a live female during acquisition. A total of 36 of these quail (the approach responders) showed only conditioned approach response to the CS object, whereas the remaining 21 quail (the consummatory responders) also displayed copulatory or consummatory responses to the CS. In the extinction phase, these two sets of quail were divided into two subgroups: one subgroup received a female in their home cages while the other did not. Consummatory responders that were not exposed to a female quail in the home cage showed a significant increase in conditioned consummatory responding as the extinction trials progressed (i.e., compulsive conditioned sexual responding), whereas the other subgroup showed no change. However, both subgroups showed resistance to extinction in both conditioned approach and consummatory behavior. These findings indicate that the increase in copulation with the terry-cloth CS during extinction is possibly caused by US deprivation. The findings also suggest that conditioned copulation with the terry-cloth CS may lead to partial drive satisfaction, which may contribute to persistence of the behavior. Implications of these findings for paraphilias and compulsive sexual behavior are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-020-01906-5DOI Listing

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