Skip to main content
. 2013 Apr 10;33(15):6434–6443. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3971-12.2013

Figure 4.

Figure 4.

Effects of acute food satiety on choice preferences. A, B, Sham-control rats (A) and animals with unilateral lesions (B) changed their choice pattern in response to SSS and SSS-Ext. Both groups of rats showed an increased choice of P1 and a decreased choice of P2. C, Rats with ipsilateral lesions significantly changed their choice preferences after SSS and SSS-Ext; however, the change in behavior during extinction was not as drastic as that observed in the other two groups. D, A contralateral lesion of the OFC and BLA prevented animals from updating their choice behavior in response to all acute satiety manipulations. Data are represented as the mean percentage choice of each option ± SEM. *p ≤ 0.05 for significant difference from the group's own baseline according to a paired-sample t test; #p = 0.05–0.07.