ABSTRACT
Adolescents with and those without mental retardation participated in a negative priming procedure in two experiments. They identified letters to stimulus displays presented in pairs. Negative priming was observed as the slowing of response times when the distractor in the first display (prime) became the target in the second display (probe). In the standard procedure, all displays include one target and one distractor. In our modification, prime displays occasionally included a distractor without a target. Although adolescents with mental retardation typically do not exhibit negative priming when responding on the basis of stimulus identity, they did so with single letter primes in these experiments.
Subject(s)
Attention , Intellectual Disability , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adolescent , Age Factors , Female , Humans , Male , Reaction TimeABSTRACT
Two experiments compared the potency of continuous infusions of cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8) for reducing sucrose intake when administered into abdominal arteries or the jugular vein. Adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats received 22-min infusions of saline or several doses of CCK-8. Sucrose was available for 20 min, beginning 2 min after onset of infusions. In the first experiment, intraceliac CCK-8 in doses of 50, 125, and 312 ng produced significant reductions in intake, but no dose affected intake when administered into the jugular vein. In experiment 2, only the highest dose, 312 ng, suppressed intake when infused into the superior mesenteric artery, and jugular infusions were again ineffective. Behavioral observations indicated that intra-arterial CCK-8 had no affect on feeding within the first several minutes of test meals but accelerated the subsequent decline in incidence of feeding. These results suggest that receptors involved in cholecystokinin satiety are widely distributed within the gastrointestinal tract.