Published March 1974
| Published
Journal Article
Open
Conditioned behavior in Drosophila melanogaster
Chicago
Abstract
Populations of Drosophila were trained by alternately exposing them to two odorants, one coupled with electric shock. On testing, the flies avoided the shock-associated odor. Pseudoconditioning, excitatory states, odor preference, sensitization, habituation, and subjective bias have been eliminated as explanations. The selective avoidance can be extinguished by retraining. All flies in the population have equal probability of expressing this behavior. Memory persists for 24 hr. Another paradigm has been developed in which flies learn to discriminate between light sources of different color.
Additional Information
© 1974 by the National Academy of Sciences. Contributed by Seymour Benzer, October 25, 1973. We thank Jeffrey Hall, Martin Heisenberg, Ronald Konopka, and George Zweig for advice and helpful discussions. This work was supported by Grant GB-27228 from the National Science Foundation. W.G.Q. was an NIH postdoctoral fellow. W.A.H. was an Earle C. Anthony fellow and, more recently, a fellow of the Gordon Ross Medical Foundation.Attached Files
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Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC388082
- Eprint ID
- 8678
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:QUIpnas74
- NSF
- GB-27228
- NIH Postdoctoral Fellowship
- Earle C. Anthony Graduate Fellowship
- Gordon Ross Medical Foundation
- Created
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2007-09-06Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-08Created from EPrint's last_modified field