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Olfactory imprinting and memory in salmonidsCooper, Jon Charles, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1974. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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The role of context in filial imprinting : neurophysiological studiesTown, Stephen Michael January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Olfactory imprinting in sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka)Plate, Elmar Maria 09 July 2018 (has links)
In the following study, I tried to link hormonal background conditions to
successful olfactory imprinting in sockeye salmon by employing behavioural,
endocrinological and electrophysio logical experiments. In the initial experiments, sockeye salmon were exposed to potential imprinting odorants, with or without additional treatment with thyroid hormones, during several juvenile stages between fertilization and beyond the PST. After two years of rearing, these fish were tested for behavioural responses to test odorants in two behavioural arenas. Neither immature nor mature fish
reacted behaviourally to the odorants that they had been exposed to previously.
Therefore, exposure of juveniles to odorants did not lead to imprinting to those odorants
under hatchery rearing conditions. In contrast, juvenile fish that were exposed to test
odorants and treated with a combination of T₃ and T₄ (in all cases) or T₃ (in one case) the
two most common forms of thyroid hormones, did exhibit an odorant recognition
response two years later. However, the response differed between immature and mature
fish. Mature fish were attracted to the imprinting odorant, whereas immature fish were repelled by the it. When immature fish were injected with GnRH before testing, their behavioural response was reversed. No behavioural response could be detected in fish that had been challenged with either T₃ or T₄ alone, in contrast to a combined treatment with both forms. Thus, I found evidence that a combination of T₃ and T₄ initiated imprinting and that GnRH motivated odorant recognition.
To examine the underlying hormonal processes, I first determined plasma thyroid hormone concentrations in sockeye salmon before and after hormonal challenges with thyroid hormones or GnRH. In addition, the activity of the deiodinase enzyme that converts T₄ into the other possible forms of thyroid hormones was investigated in sensory and non-sensory tissues. The results suggested that only a combined T₃T₄ treatment increased the availability of both thyroid hormone forms in blood plasma, while a separate challenge with T₄ suppressed T₃ availability and vice versa. Moreover, the results provided evidence for deiodinase activity in the olfactory epithelium and the retina and demonstrated that GnRH can modulate the T₄ conversion process. This inform ation was helpful for planning and interpretation of the remaining experiments. Results obtained from a classical conditioning paradigm (heart-rate-conditioning), provided support for the hypothesis that GnRH lowers the threshold to an imprinting odorant and that the influence of GnRH was not restricted to an enhancement of motivation.
To investigate whether hormonal action could also modulate the sensitivity of the peripheral olfactory system, electrophysiological responses from the olfactory epithelium (electro-olfacto-grams or EOGs) were recorded. The EOG results established that thyroid hormones and GnRH increased the EOG response of adult naïve (never imprinted to an odorant) fish, as did maturity. In the last experiments, I conducted EOG recordings on fish that had been imprinted at a juvenile stage. In summary, EOG recordings revealed that the imprinting process increased sensitivity to the imprinting odorant at maturity, while sensitivity in immature fish was decreased in comparison to non-imprinted fish. In combination with my behavioural results, this could explain why salmon do not enter their natal stream before they reach maturity. At maturity however, I also encountered desensitization to non-imprinting odorants, which might increase the ability to focus the olfactory system to the task of homing. / Graduate
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How to tell your mother from a Bush : a model of predispositions and filial imprinting in domestic chicks /Hadden, Lucy E., January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, San Diego, 1998. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 92-96).
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Ontogeny of approach and escape responses and circadian activity rhythms in domestic chicksMiller, Don Edward, January 1966 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1966. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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The effects of effort and day of exposure on imprintingVan Dyke, Jean Elizabeth 01 January 1974 (has links)
24 pairs of newly-hatched Leghorn chicks were randomly divided into 3 groups. Ss in one group followed a moving object for 30 min on Day 1 of life; Ss in another group followed for 30 min on Day 2; Ss in the remaining group followed for 15 min on Day 1 and 15 min on Day 2. One S in each pair followed by his own effort, while the other S rode behind the object in a transparent box. On Day 4, Ss were tested for the duration of following of the object. No important differences among groups were observed. On Day 6, Ss were tested for ability to discriminate between the original and a novel object, and for following the original. Active Ss scored significantly higher than passive Ss on all Day 6 tests; Ss trained on Day 2 scored significantly higher on the following than Ss trained on Day 1. The results suggest that the ‘law of effort’ may apply more to discrimination than to recognition of the imprinting object.
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