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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 2 August 2001, pp. 809-823
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Psychology and Institute for Neuroscience, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712
Jones, Dirk and
F. Gonzalez-Lima.
Mapping Pavlovian Conditioning Effects on the Brain:
Blocking, Contiguity, and Excitatory Effects. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 809-823, 2001. Pavlovian conditioning
effects on the brain were investigated by mapping rat brain activity
with fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) autoradiography. The goal was to map the
effects of the same tone after blocking or eliciting a conditioned
emotional response (CER). In the tone-blocked group, previous learning
about a light blocked a CER to the tone. In the tone-excitor group, the
same pairings of tone with shock US resulted in a CER to the tone in
the absence of previous learning about the light. A third group showed
no CER after pseudorandom presentations of these stimuli. Brain systems involved in the various associative effects of Pavlovian conditioning were identified, and their functional significance was interpreted in
light of previous FDG studies. Three conditioning effects were mapped:
1) blocking effects: FDG uptake was lower in medial
prefrontal cortex and higher in spinal trigeminal and cuneate nuclei in
the tone-blocked group relative to the tone-excitor group.
2) Contiguity effects: relative to pseudorandom controls,
similar FDG uptake increases in the tone-blocked and -excitor groups
were found in auditory regions (inferior colliculus and cortex),
hippocampus (CA1), cerebellum, caudate putamen, and solitary nucleus.
Contiguity effects may be due to tone-shock pairings common to the
tone-blocked and -excitor groups rather than their different CER. And
3) excitatory effects: FDG uptake increases limited to the
tone-excitor group occurred in a circuit linked to the CER, including
insular and anterior cingulate cortex, vertical diagonal band nucleus,
anterior hypothalamus, and caudoventral caudate putamen. This study
provided the first large-scale map of brain regions underlying the
Kamin blocking effect on conditioning. In particular, the results
suggest that suppression of prefrontal activity and activation of
unconditioned stimulus pathways are important neural substrates of the
Kamin blocking effect.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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D. Barrett, J. Shumake, D. Jones, and F. Gonzalez-Lima Metabolic Mapping of Mouse Brain Activity after Extinction of a Conditioned Emotional Response J. Neurosci., July 2, 2003; 23(13): 5740 - 5749. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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