Abstract
Investigated in 3 experiments with male hooded rats (N = 61) the effects of parasagittal cuts placed at 3 anterior-posterior positions. Cuts that separated portions of the medial from the lateral hypothalamus produced severe hyposexuality if they lay lateral to the medial preoptic-anterior hypothalamic continuum. Hyperphagia, irritability, and modest sexual impairment were produced if the cuts lay lateral to the anterior tips of the ventromedial hypothalamic nuclei and slightly invaded the anterior hypothalamus. Posterior, but not anterior, medial-forebrain-bundle (MFB) cuts disrupted copulation. Central gray cuts resulted in slight hyperphagia, and reticular formation cuts resulted in hyposexuality. It is concluded that the medial hypothalamic nuclei exert their effects on eating, irritability, and copulation through their lateral connections with the lateral hypothalamus and those components of the MFB that descend on (or ascend from) the lower brainstem. (40 ref.) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)