The effects of two forms of physical activity on eyeblink classical conditioning

▶ Physical activity has been shown to enhance several forms of learning and to induce markers of neural plasticity in several brain regions ▶ The effects of physical activity on eyeblink conditioning, one of the best understood forms of mammalian learning, have not been previously investigated ▶ Vol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioural brain research 2011-05, Vol.219 (1), p.165-174
Hauptverfasser: Green, John T., Chess, Amy C., Burns, Montana, Schachinger, Kira M., Thanellou, Alexandra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:▶ Physical activity has been shown to enhance several forms of learning and to induce markers of neural plasticity in several brain regions ▶ The effects of physical activity on eyeblink conditioning, one of the best understood forms of mammalian learning, have not been previously investigated ▶ Voluntary wheel running, but not motor skill training, facilitated delay eyeblink conditioning ▶ Eyeblink conditioning offers some advantages for studying how exercise improves learning. Voluntary exercise, in the form of free access to a running wheel in the home cage, has been shown to improve several forms of learning and memory. Acrobatic training, in the form of learning to traverse an elevated obstacle course, has been shown to induce markers of neural plasticity in the cerebellar cortex in rodents. In three experiments, we examined the effects of these two forms of physical activity on delay eyeblink conditioning in rats. In Experiment 1, exercising rats were given 17 days of free access to a running wheel in their home cage prior to 10 days of delay eyeblink conditioning. Rats that exercised conditioned significantly better and showed a larger reflexive eyeblink unconditioned response to the periocular stimulation unconditioned stimulus than rats that did not exercise. In Experiment 2, exercising rats were given 17 days of free access to a running wheel in their home cage prior to 10 days of explicitly unpaired stimulus presentations. Rats that exercised responded the same to tone, light, and periocular stimulation as rats that did not exercise. In Experiment 3, acrobatic training rats were given 15 days of daily training on an elevated obstacle course prior to 10 days of eyeblink conditioning. Activity control rats underwent 15 days of yoked daily running in an open field. Rats that underwent acrobatic training did not differ in eyeblink conditioning from activity control rats. The ability to measure the learned response precisely, and the well-mapped neural circuitry of eyeblink conditioning offer some advantages for the study of exercise effects on learning and memory.
ISSN:0166-4328
1872-7549
DOI:10.1016/j.bbr.2011.01.016