Fear reduction in the rat following central cholinergic blockade.

Abstract
In the presence of a natural predator, cat, 92 male Long-Evans hooded rats (in 2 experiments) showed a constellation of responses that was used to define fear: freezing, avoiding the cat, and suppressing consummatory behavior. Compared with controls, Ss treated with an anticholinergic drug, scopolamine, showed significantly less freezing and significantly more approach to the cat; further, these Ss actually engaged in consummatory behavior in proximity to the cat. On a 2nd, undrugged exposure to the cat, the original scopolamine-treated Ss continued to show significantly less freezing, more approach, and more drinking than control Ss. Since methyl scopolamine, which mimics the peripheral actions of scopolamine, had no effect on fear responses, these results implicate a central cholinergic system in fear responses or species-typical defense reactions. (24 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)