Young rats bearing a mass of 1.06 gm. both at shoulder level on the back and posteriorly at the sacrum exhibit in their geotropic progression a relationship between angle θ of oriented path and inclination α of substratum which differs from those obtained with rats of the same race carrying the same total added load concentrated anteriorly or posteriorly. The distributed load affects more or less equally all the groups of receptor units concerned in tension excitation. It is shown that the variation of orientation is organically determined, quantitatively, by the intensity of tension excitation, regardless of the imposition of the added loads. The bearing of these facts upon the theory of the geotropic orientation is discussed.
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Copyright, 1932, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research
1932
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