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Olfactory response plasticity

Taken together, this body of work demonstrates that adult behavioral responses to social odors are shaped by early olfactory experience. Indeed, heterospecific or artificial odor cues associated with the rearing environment acquire attractive properties that can last into adulthood in many rodent species. Furthermore, early experience with opposite-sex odors appears to be critical for the normal development of appropriate behavioral responses to sexual odors in mice and hamsters. Importantly, the behavioral plasticity observed using these different experimental approaches may all be mediated by a classical conditioning model of olfactory learning. The experience-dependent development of odor preference in rodents therefore provides a powerful model for understanding how the olfactory system recognizes and learns the salience of social odors, a function that is critical for the appropriate expression of reproductive behavior. [Pg.258]


See other pages where Olfactory response plasticity is mentioned: [Pg.760]    [Pg.520]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.703]    [Pg.705]    [Pg.760]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.169]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.703 , Pg.719 ]




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