在大鼠经典眨眼条件反射过程中,恐惧向条件刺激和情境发展。

Gabrielle B Britton, Lori B Astheimer
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引用次数: 11

摘要

在经典的眨眼条件反射中,非特异性情绪反应发生在条件反射的早期,早于眨眼反应的出现,这种非特异性情绪反应被认为与恐惧的发展同时发生。通过同时测量自由运动大鼠的恐惧和眨眼条件反射来检验这种双过程学习模型。冻僵是动物的恐惧指数,在训练情境下的试验间隔和在新情境下的音调条件刺激(CS)期间进行测量。接受CS- us配对的动物在训练早期对环境和CS的恐惧水平升高,随着训练的进行而下降,而眨眼条件反应(CRs)在获得过程中逐渐发展,在灭绝过程中下降。随机的CS- us演示对情境和CS的恐惧反应模式与配对演示相似,尽管眨眼CR百分比较低,这表明恐惧反应的减少与习得的高水平眨眼反应无关。配对训练的结果与条件反射的双过程模型一致,该模型假设早期的情绪反应促进了随后的运动学习,但随机对照动物的测量表明,部分CS-US偶发事件会减少恐惧,尽管眨眼cr水平较低。这些发现表明,在眨眼条件反射过程中,CS-US偶然性与恐惧水平之间存在关系,并可能有助于进一步阐明恐惧条件反射在这个简单范例中所起的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fear develops to the conditioned stimulus and to the context during classical eyeblink conditioning in rats.

In classical eyeblink conditioning, non-specific emotional responses to the aversive shock unconditioned stimulus (US), which are presumed to coincide with the development of fear, occur early in conditioning and precede the emergence of eyeblink responses. This two-process learning model was examined by concurrently measuring fear and eyeblink conditioning in the freely moving rat. Freezing served as an index of fear in animals and was measured during the inter-trial intervals in the training context and during a tone conditioned stimulus (CS) presented in a novel context. Animals that received CS-US pairings exhibited elevated levels of fear to the context and CS early in training that decreased over sessions, while eyeblink conditioned responses (CRs) developed gradually during acquisition and decreased during extinction. Random CS-US presentations produced a similar pattern of fear responses to the context and CS as paired presentations despite low eyeblink CR percentages, indicating that fear responding was decreased independent of high levels of learned eyeblink responding. The results of paired training were consistent with two-process models of conditioning that postulate that early emotional responding facilitates subsequent motor learning, but measures from random control animals demonstrate that partial CS-US contingencies produce decrements in fear despite low levels of eyeblink CRs. These findings suggest a relationship between CS-US contingency and fear levels during eyeblink conditioning, and may serve to clarify further the role that fear conditioning plays in this simple paradigm.

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