Conditioning- and Time-Dependent Increases in Context Fear and Generalization

A prominent feature of fear memories and anxiety disorders is that they endure across extended periods of time. Here, we examine how the severity of the initial fear experience influences incubation, generalization, and sensitization of contextual fear memories across time. Adult rats were presented...

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Veröffentlicht in:Learning & memory (Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2016-07, Vol.23 (7), p.379-385
Hauptverfasser: Poulos, Andrew M, Mehta, Nehali, Lu, Bryan, Amir, Dorsa, Livingston, Briana, Santarelli, Anthony, Zhuravka, Irina, Fanselow, Michael S
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container_issue 7
container_start_page 379
container_title Learning & memory (Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.)
container_volume 23
creator Poulos, Andrew M
Mehta, Nehali
Lu, Bryan
Amir, Dorsa
Livingston, Briana
Santarelli, Anthony
Zhuravka, Irina
Fanselow, Michael S
description A prominent feature of fear memories and anxiety disorders is that they endure across extended periods of time. Here, we examine how the severity of the initial fear experience influences incubation, generalization, and sensitization of contextual fear memories across time. Adult rats were presented with either five, two, one, or zero shocks (1.2 mA, 2 sec) during contextual fear conditioning. Following a recent (1 d) or remote (28 d) retention interval all subjects were returned to the original training context to measure fear memory and/or to a novel context to measure the specificity of fear conditioning. Our results indicate rats that received two or five shocks show an "incubation"-like enhancement of fear between recent and remote retention intervals, while single-shocked animals show stable levels of context fear memory. Moreover, when fear was tested in a novel context, 1 and 2 shocked groups failed to freeze, whereas five shocked rats showed a time-dependent generalization of context memory. Stress enhancement of fear learning to a second round of conditioning was evident in all previously shocked animals. Based on these results, we conclude that the severity or number of foot shocks determines not only the level of fear memory, but also the time-dependent incubation of fear and its generalization across distinct contexts.
doi_str_mv 10.1101/lm.041400.115
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source MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central
subjects Animals
Anxiety Disorders
Conditioning
Context Effect
Electroshock
Extinction, Psychological
Fear
Generalization
Generalization (Psychology)
Male
Memory
Rats, Long-Evans
Retention (Psychology)
Stress Variables
Stress, Psychological
title Conditioning- and Time-Dependent Increases in Context Fear and Generalization
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