SINGLE-UNIT ACTIVITY IN THE MEDIAL PREFRONTAL
CORTEX DURING PARTIALLY REINFORCED FEAR CONDITIONING |
J.C.Erlich*; J.S.Choi; J.E.LeDoux |
Ctr. for Neural Sci., New York Univ., New York, NY, USA |
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Behavioral and physiological evidence implicate the medial
pre-frontal cortex (mPFC) as an important structure for regulating emotion.
Field potentials recorded in mPFC during fear conditioning are inversely
correlated with fear behavior and single-unit responses from mPFC neurons
show memory for fear extinction. To further understand information encoding
by mPFC neurons, rats were trained with a conditioned stimulus (CS, 12KHz
pulsiform auditory, 80 dB, 20 sec) paired with an unconditioned stimulus
(US, low intensity periorbital shock) using a partial reinforcement schedule.
The subjects had free access to Kool-Aid in a drinking tube and the degree
to which the CS suppressed licking was a measure of fear. Single units were
recorded from the mPFC via chronically implanted electrodes. CS-elicited
unit responses were compared when licking was suppressed by the CS vs. times
when licking was not suppressed. For cells that were inhibited by the CS
this inhibition was larger during licking than suppression. For cells that
were excited by the CS this excitation was larger during licking than suppression.
The relative timing of the responses of these two classes of cells, excited
vs. inhibited, gives an interesting picture of cortical microcircuitry,
in that the difference in response in the two behavioral conditions is mirrored
in the two cell types.
Support Contributed By: MH3877; J.C.E is an HHMI Pre-Doctoral Fellow
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Program No. 208.7
Poster presentation:Sunday, Oct. 24, 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
Location: NN22 |
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