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lickometry

Lickometry is the measurement and analysis of licking behavior, typically in small mammals such as mice and rats. It employs lickometer systems that detect each licking event as an index of consummatory or reward-driven behavior. Lickometry is used to study taste palatability, reward processing, fluid intake regulation, and learning-related changes in licking patterns. The term can also apply to human studies investigating orofacial licking, although animal models are most common.

Most common devices are contact lickometers, where a metal or conductive spout forms part of an electrical

Metrics include inter-lick interval, lick rate, total licks, total intake (often estimated from spout properties), lick

Applications span neurobiology, pharmacology, and behavioral psychology, including studies of taste preference, reinforcement learning, and the

Limitations include potential confounds from spout position or spout-lever design, variability in tongue contact efficiency, and

See also: licking behavior, lickometer, consummatory behavior, taste perception.

circuit;
a
lick
completes
the
circuit
and
registers
as
a
lick.
Alternative
sensors
include
capacitive
or
optical
systems.
Data
are
recorded
as
timestamps
of
lick
events,
enabling
high-resolution
temporal
analyses.
bouts,
and
bout
duration.
Analyses
may
examine
lick
microstructure,
such
as
burst
size
and
pauses,
to
infer
motivation
and
palatability.
Experimental
designs
often
manipulate
taste
concentration,
caloric
value,
pharmacological
agents,
or
satiety
state.
effects
of
drugs
on
motivation
to
drink.
Lickometry
provides
objective,
moment-to-moment
data
that
complement
broader
behavioral
measures.
differences
in
sensor
sensitivity.
Data
interpretation
requires
careful
handling
of
non-independence
in
lick
sequences
and
potential
drift
in
recording
equipment.
Cross-species
comparisons
require
normalization
for
size
and
licking
repertoire.