Rats can be divided according to their responses to startle-eliciting
stimuli into 2 groups with different emotional states. About half of t
he 54 female Sprague-Dawley rats showed long-lasting freezing behavior
after 1-8 stimuli (10 kHz, 110 dB spl). In freezing rats the startle
amplitude was higher than in nonfreezing rats, even on the very first
startle response. This finding demonstrates that the anxiety state of
these animals before the first startle-eliciting stimulus, and not jus
t the aversiveness of the stimulus, contributes to freezing behavior.
In addition, in freezing rats there was no influence of spontaneous mo
tor activity or of adaptation time on startle amplitude. Only in nonfr
eezing rats were high motor activities correlated with lowered startle
amplitudes, and only in these rats did the course of startle habituat
ion depend on adaptation time.