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Effect of continuous gamma-ray exposure on performance of learned tasks and effect of subsequent fractionated exposures on blood-forming tissueSixteen monkeys trained to perform continuous and discrete-avoidance and fixed-ratio tasks with visual and auditory cues were performance-tested before, during, and after 10-day gamma-ray exposures totaling 0, 500, 750, and 1000 rads. Approximately 14 months after the performance-test exposures, surviving animals were exposed to 100-rad gamma-ray fractions at 56-day intervals to observe injury and recovery patterns of blood-forming tissues. The fixed-ratio, food-reward task performance showed a transient decline in all dose groups within 24 hours of the start of gamma-ray exposure, followed by recovery to normal food-consumption levels within 48 to 72 hours. Avoidance tasks were performed successfully by all groups during the 10-day exposure, but reaction times of the two higher dose-rate groups in which animals received 3 and 4 rads per hour or total doses of 750 and 1000 rads, respectively, were somewhat slower.
Document ID
19720010034
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Spalding, J. F.
(Los Alamos Scientific Lab. NM, United States)
Holland, L. M.
(Los Alamos Scientific Lab. NM, United States)
Prine, J. R.
(Los Alamos Scientific Lab. NM, United States)
Farrer, D. N.
(Aeromed. Res. Lab. (6571st) Holloman AFB, N. Mex., United States)
Braun, R. G.
(Aeromed. Res. Lab. (6571st) Holloman AFB, N. Mex., United States)
Date Acquired
August 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1972
Publication Information
Publication: NASA, Washington Proc. of the Natl. Symp. on Nat. and Manmade Radiation in Space
Subject Category
Biosciences
Accession Number
72N17684
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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