Journal ArticleDOI
Responses of mice to odors associated with stress.
Reads0
Chats0
About:
This article is published in Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology.The article was published on 1970-05-01. It has received 104 citations till now.read more
Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Male social status, physiology, and ability to block pregnancies in female house mice (Mus musculus)
TL;DR: Dominant and subordinate male house mice (Mus musculus) were examined for differences in ability to induce a pregnancy block in recently inseminated female conspecifics and clear differences were found in all these parameters during the experiments.
Journal ArticleDOI
Differential effects of prior dominance or subordination experience on conspecific odor preferences in mice.
TL;DR: It is suggested that the apparent mild preferences of subordinates for dominant conspecific odors reflects fear motivated risk assessment and approaches of dominants to subordinate odors seems to be appetitively motivated.
Book ChapterDOI
Chemical Signals in Agonistic and Social Behavior of Rodents
TL;DR: Ten years ago, a review regarding the role of chemical signals in the social behavior of rodents would have been a simple task; there were only a few works showing the involvement of olfactory cues in thesocial relations of mice and rats.
Journal ArticleDOI
α9-nAChR knockout mice exhibit dysregulation of stress responses, affect and reward-related behaviour.
TL;DR: A novel role is determined for the &agr;9‐nAChR in mounting a normal stress response and in the regulation of affective‐ and reward‐related behaviour, and suggest that pursuing the receptor for clinical treatments may not be as straightforward as has been suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI
Androgen effects on responsiveness to aggression and stress-related odors of male mice.
TL;DR: The results suggest that gonadal hormone effects on olfactory responsivity are somewhat specific, and more interestingly, that the mechanism behind the effects of gonadal hormones on rodent aggression may lie in their influence on the nature of the response to the relevant o aroma stimuli.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Mice: Individual Recognition by Olfactory Cues
TL;DR: Mice discriminated between two male mice of the same inbred strain on the basis of olfactory cues and could also discriminate between two different species and between males and females.
Journal ArticleDOI
Electrical and behavioral effects of different types of shock stimuli on the rat.
Journal ArticleDOI
The relation between olfactory stimulation and aggressive behaviour in mice
TL;DR: A substantial reduction of aggression occurred when the animals' natural odours were masked by scent, and the latency of responding aggressively increased threefold and the mean number of attacks decreased by the same factor.
Related Papers (5)
The effect of olfactory stimuli on the agonistic behaviour of laboratory mice.
J. H. Mackintosh,E. C. Grant +1 more