This thesis examines Beach's hypothesis that the sexual behaviour of male
rats is under multisensory control and is resistant to the loss of tactile
information from the vibrissae. The loss of perioral sensation was found to
profoundly disrupt sexual behaviour in sexually inexperienced males tested
with females showing five ascending levels of precopulatory behaviour.
Males did not copulate with females displaying presenting, presenting and
hopping, hopping and darting levels of proceptive behaviour. However,
males paired with darting females displaying the highest level level of
proceptive behaviour did copulate in the presence of perioral anapsis caused
by intramystacial injection of lidocaine. Injection of lidocaine
intraperitoneally and intramasseterically showed that this effect was not due
to systemic toxicity. Prior sexual experience was found to attenuate the effect
of perioral anapsis and males given three prior copulatory trials copulated
with presenting females in the presence of perioral perioral anapsis. Males
given one prior copulatory trial also copulated with presenting females in
the presence of perioral anapsis. These results complement recent research
which has called for a revision of the multisensory hyopothesis and indicate
that trigeminally mediated tactile information from the vibrissae plays an
important role in the initiation of sexual behaviour in the naive male rat.
Date of Award | 1997 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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THE ROLE OF TACTILE SENSATION MEDIATED BY THE INFRAORBITAL BRANCH OF THE TRIGEMINAL NERVE (V) ON SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR OF MALE AND FEMALE RATS
MALINEK, V. (Author). 1997
Student thesis: PhD