Hippocampal Formation Supports Conditioning to Memory of a Context

It has been proposed that contextual fear conditioning depends on 2 processes: (a) construction of a conjunctive representation of the features that make up the context and (b) association of the representation with shock. Support for this view comes from studies indicating that prior exposure to th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral neuroscience 2002-08, Vol.116 (4), p.530-538
Hauptverfasser: Rudy, Jerry W, Barrientos, Ruth M, O'Reilly, Randall C
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description It has been proposed that contextual fear conditioning depends on 2 processes: (a) construction of a conjunctive representation of the features that make up the context and (b) association of the representation with shock. Support for this view comes from studies indicating that prior exposure to the conditioning context facilitates contextual fear conditioning supported by immediate shock. Thus, conditioning produced by immediate shock is to the memory representation of the preexposed context, which is activated by retrieval cues associated with this context. The authors' experiments support this interpretation and indicate that this process depends on an intact hippocampal formation. These results support the hypothesis that the hippocampal formation supports contextual fear conditioning by storing a conjunctive representation of context.
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source MEDLINE; EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Animal
Animals
Biological and medical sciences
Brain
Cognition & reasoning
Conditioning
Conditioning, Classical
Contextual Associations
Fear
Fear & phobias
Fear - physiology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Hippocampus
Hippocampus - anatomy & histology
Hippocampus - physiology
Learning. Memory
Male
Memory
Memory - physiology
Neurology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Rats
Rats, Long-Evans
Shock
title Hippocampal Formation Supports Conditioning to Memory of a Context
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