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J Exp Anal Behav. 1962 October; 5(4): 511–520.
doi: 10.1901/jeab.1962.5-511.
PMCID: PMC1404196
Reflexive fighting in response to aversive stimulation1
R. E. Ulrich and N. H. Azrin
1This paper is based in part on a thesis submitted by the first-named author in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Ph.D. degree at Southern Illinois University. This investigation was conducted at the Anna State Hospital and was supported by grants from NSF, NIMH, and the Psychiatric Training and Research Fund of the Illinois Department of Public Welfare. The assistance of W. Holz, R. Hutchinson, and Mrs. K. Oliver is gratefully acknowledged.
Abstract
Reflexive fighting was elicited between paired rats as a reflex reaction to electric shock prior to any specific conditioning. Such fighting was fairly stereotyped and easily differentiated from the rats' usual behavior. The strength of this reflex was not attributable to any apparent operant reinforcement. Elicitation of fighting was a direct function of the enclosed floor area and a nonmonotonic function of the shock intensity.
Failure to scramble the polarity of the electrified grid produced inconsistent fighting. Under optimal conditions fighting was consistently elicited by shock regardless of the rat's sex, strain, previous familiarity with each other, or the number present during shock. Repeated shock presentations did not produce an appreciable decrease in fighting until signs of physical debility appeared. Although shock did not cause a rat to attack inanimate objects, it did produce attack movements toward other small animals. Failure of guinea pigs to defend themselves revealed that the elicitation of fighting from the rat does not require reciprocal attack. Paired hamsters showed fighting reactions similar to those of the rats, whereas guinea pigs failed to fight. Electrode shock and a heated floor elicited fighting between the rats, but intense noise and a cooled floor did not.
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  • TEDESCHI RE, TEDESCHI DH, MUCHA A, COOK L, MATTIS PA, FELLOWS EJ. Effects of various centrally acting drugs on fighting behavior of mice. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1959 Jan;125(1):28–34. [PubMed]