Rats aren't very loud at all if your talking about one or two PET rats, though if you have them in a barred cage instead of a tank pen, you will hear little gnawing's on the bars of the cage don't worry they wont get out but it can take some getting use to. and make sure if you have a barred cage nothing gets within reach because they love to pull blankets and shirts in so they can nest in something soft.
Another thing that may annoy some people is the water bottle that clinks when they take a lick at it. if you hear a lot of pulling on the water bottle and it hits hard against the cage make sure you check it that its full even if you just filled it sometimes you'll get a bad one and it will leak, if its nice and full it will mean less noise.
i not to sure
Classical conditioning.
baby albert's fear of rat extinguishes
Initially, little Albert wanted to touch and play with the rat. However, each time he tried he heard a loud clanging sound. This lead to Albert not wanting to play with the rat, and eventually to be frightened of it. This is connected to conditional learning, as Albert was conditioned to fear the rat through punishment.
Rats are scared of us because they have different, better hearing. When they hear a footstep, for them it's like a bomb! They run away from loud noises.
there are many diffrent pets but if you want a small tainable pet that doesn't make loud noise you might want a pet rat
Yes, although it is more of a cough than a bark. There are many types of snake sounds, and some are remarkably loud. The Indian rat snake and the king cobra make loud growling sounds almost like a lion.
Yes. When they were used for rat hunting, they would bark very loudly to let the owner know where in the rat hole they where and if they were stuck or not. Westies may look small, but they have a really loud voice.
Watson was a Psychologist and a key figure in the development of behaviourist Psychology. He put little Albert in a room with a white rat. He then waited for Albert to approach or touch the rat. At this point, he clanged a loud metal bar. This eventually lead to Albert being scared of the rat, a fear which spilled out onto other fluffy white things like cotton wool or santa's beard.
The little Albert experiment proved that psychological fears could be influence by classical conditioning. Little Albert, an infant, was first shown a white rat. At first, he was not afraid of the white rat. However, John Watson, leader of the experiment, presented the white rat repeatedly with a frightening high pitched noise (unconditioned stimulus) which scared little Albert (the unconditioned response). After five times, the infant became frightened whenever the white rat was presented (conditioned response). The white rat was what he associated with the fear of the loud noise and was now the conditioned stimulus.
Rat at Rat R was created in 1981.
If it is a male rat then it become sterile.A castrated rat is a sterile rat.