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Variation in motor activity on different time scales and responsiveness to oral stimulation in the rat fetus

✍ Scribed by Benjamin D. MacLennan; William P. Smotherman; Steven S. Robertson


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
59 KB
Volume
33
Category
Article
ISSN
0012-1630

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✦ Synopsis


The near-term rat fetus exhibits brief oral grasp responses to discrete presentations of an artificial nipple. In the present experiment, an artificial nipple was presented to individual fetal subjects 10 times. Five of the presentations were timed to occur when spontaneous fetal motor activity was low and five while activity was high, as determined by the baseline activity for the individual fetus. The likelihood of responding to the artificial nipple was increased when the fetus was relatively inactive at the moment of stimulus presentation. Furthermore, stimulus presentations that resulted in oral grasping of the artificial nipple were associated with greater point-to-point variability (2-s intervals) in motor activity during the 30-s period preceding the presentation of the artificial nipple. This pattern of results indicates that the recent history of general motor activity as well as the level of activity at the instant of stimulus presentation may contribute to variation in responding to biologically relevant stimuli early in development.