Disruption of passive avoidance learning in the rat by electrical stimulation of the hippocampus
Five experiments, with 184 male albino rats, examined the effect of electrical stimulation to discrete regions of the dorsal hippocampus on passive avoidance. Ss stepped from a brightly lit, white compartment to a dark compartment. Following footshock in the dark compartment, step-through latencies...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Behavioral neuroscience 1984-08, Vol.98 (4), p.567-583 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Five experiments, with 184 male albino rats, examined the effect of electrical stimulation to discrete regions of the dorsal hippocampus on passive avoidance. Ss stepped from a brightly lit, white compartment to a dark compartment. Following footshock in the dark compartment, step-through latencies were recorded 1 min, 24 hrs, and 48 hrs after footshock. When given 20 step-through trials prior to footshock, dentate-stimulated Ss exhibited lack of passive avoidance with particularly short latencies at 1 min, and CA1-stimulated Ss showed reduced latencies compared with latencies of cortical and nonoperated controls. In Exp II, Ss given stimulation in the same regions performed the avoidance task without prior step-through experience. All groups showed less passive avoidance than the control group in Exp I, and there were no significant differences between groups. With a single step-through trial before the footshock trial, longer avoidance latencies were recorded, but again groups did not differ significantly. Dentate-implanted Ss, given 20 prior exposure trials but with stimulation at different stages of the task sequence, demonstrated a passive avoidance deficit at 1 min after footshock. Results are discussed in terms of the generation of expectancy that the black compartment was a safe place and the effects of brain stimulation on the expectancy, with particular reference to O. S. Vinogradova's (1975) theory of hippocampal function. (32 ref) |
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ISSN: | 0735-7044 1939-0084 |
DOI: | 10.1037/0735-7044.98.4.567 |