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Ontogeny of eyeblink conditioning using a visual conditional stimulus

โœ Scribed by Christine Paczkowski; Dragana Ivkovich; Mark E. Stanton


Book ID
101265969
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
221 KB
Volume
35
Category
Article
ISSN
0012-1630

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โœฆ Synopsis


The developmental emergence of associative learning in rodents is determined by interactions among sensory, motor, and associative systems that are engaged in a particular experimental preparation (Carter & Stanton, 1996;Hunt & Campbell, 1997;Rudy, 1992). In fear conditioning, chemosensory, auditory, and visual cues emerge successively as effective conditional stimuli (CS) during postnatal ontogeny. In the present study, we begin to examine the generality of this principle of sensory system development for eyeblink conditioning, a form of associative learning that develops substantially later than conditioned fear (Carter & Stanton, 1996). We asked whether the developmental emergence of eyeblink conditioning to a visual CS occurs at an age that is the same or different from conditioning to an auditory CS. In Experiment 1, rat pups were trained on postnatal Day 17 or 24 with experimental parameters (and design) that were identical to our previous studies of eyeblink conditioning except that presentation of a light rather than a tone served as the CS. The outcome was also identical: no eyeblink conditioning on Day 17 and strong conditioning on Day 24. In Experiment 2, conditioning to tone versus light was directly compared by means of a discrimination learning design on postnatal Days 19, 21, 23, and 31. There was no evidence for differential development of auditory versus visual eyeblink conditioning. The difference between this outcome and previous ones involving conditioned fear (Hunt & Campbell, 1997;Rudy, 1992) suggests that principles concerning sensory maturation and learning may be different for early-versus latedeveloping associative systems.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Ontogeny of delay versus trace eyeblink
โœ Dragana Ivkovich; Christine M. Paczkowski; Mark E. Stanton ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2000 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 180 KB ๐Ÿ‘ 2 views

The ontogeny of delay versus trace eyeblink conditioning was examined in 19-, 23-, and 30-day-old rat pups. Pairings of a tone conditioned stimulus (CS) and periocular shock unconditioned stimulus (US; 100-ms) were presented in one of three conditioning paradigms: standard delay [380-ms CS, 280-ms i