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Organization of sex-typical patterns of defense during food protection in the rat: The role of the opponent's sex

✍ Scribed by Evelyn F. Field; Ian Q. Whishaw; Sergio M. Pellis


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
109 KB
Volume
23
Category
Article
ISSN
0096-140X

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✦ Synopsis


Feeding rats defend a food item from an approaching conspecific by turning away, laterally, about 180Β°. Females and males use a different composition of movements and stepping patterns to perform these defensive dodges. This study was designed to examine the role of the robber's sex on the execution of sex-typical patterns of dodging. All subjects were tested with a partner of each sex. During dodging, females used the female-typical pattern of pivoting around the pelvis, and males used the male-typical midbody pivot, irrespective of the robber's sex. These findings show that the sex-typical patterns of dodging are not determined by the sex of the partner. Females and males however, differed in how they were oriented towards a same sex robber at the end of the dodge. This suggests that while male and female robbers must pose different defensive problems, these differences are dealt with by modifying the sex-typical pattern of dodging rather than by switching to the dodge pattern of the opposite sex. This further suggests that the differences in the composition of the dodge pattern in males and females are not due to extrinsic contingencies, but rather, are due to intrinsic differences in the sex-typical organization of defensive motor patterns.


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