ESCAPE FROM FEAR: A DETAILED BEHAVIORAL ANALYSIS OF
TWO ATYPICAL RESPONSES REINFORCED BY CS-TERMINATION |
C.K.Cain*; J.E.LeDoux |
Center for Neural Science, New York Univ., New York, NY,
USA |
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In escape from fear (EFF) rats learn a response (Re)
that eliminates exposure to a fear-eliciting conditioned stimulus
(CS). The aversive nature of the CS is believed to motivate EFF learning,
and Re is negatively reinforced by CS termination. EFF learning is
important theoretically and also as a model for active coping. However,
it is controversial, partly because it has been difficult to reliably
reproduce. The goals of this study were to address past concerns about
EFF learning and to design a reliable protocol amenable to mechanistic
dissection.
Two atypical EFF responses, rearing and headpoking, were examined
with a novel protocol. A day after Pavlovian tone-shock pairings,
rats were placed in a novel chamber for a single EFF training session.
LEARN rats received 25 massed CS presentations that terminated after
60s or when the rat made the Re. YOKED rats received identical CS
patterns independent of their behavior. A day later, rats were returned
to the chamber for a long-term test (1 x 10-min. CS). Freezing, rearing,
headpoking and grooming were analyzed for both sessions.
There was strong evidence for response-specific EFF learning when
rearing was reinforced by CS-termination. LEARN rats reared twice
as much as YOKED rats in both the training and testing sessions, but
showed equal headpoking and grooming behavior. While freezing was
initially the same between the groups, LEARN rats extinguished faster
and froze less the next day, suggesting that EFF learning results
in faster elimination of a passive defensive reaction. Other controls
demonstrated that EFF learning is aversively-motivated and controlled
by the CS. Finally, when headpoking was reinforced with CS-termination,
there were no differences in any of the behaviors, suggesting that
not all responses can be learned with EFF training. Thus, our protocol
results in robust, long-lasting EFF learning during a single 33-minute
session that may be ideal for mechanistic studies. Indeed, we are
presently investigating the role of forebrain regions in EFF learning.
Support Contributed By: NIMH grants
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Program No. 415.3.
Poster presentation:Monday, Nov. 14, 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
Location: HH26 |
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