| Behav Brain Res 2002 Aug 21;134(1-2):299-306 | Related Articles, Links |
Barrientos RM, O'Reilly RC, Rudy JW.
Department of Psychology and The Center for Neuroscience, University of
Colorado, CB345, Boulder, CO 80309, USA. rbarr@psych.colorado.edu
Pre-exposure to the context facilitates the small amount of contextual fear
conditioning that is normally produced by immediate shock. This context
pre-exposure facilitation effect provides a convenient way to study the rat's
learning about context. We recently reported that anterograde damage to dorsal
hippocampus prevents this facilitation. The present experiments strengthen this
conclusion by showing that the protein synthesis inhibitor, anisomycin, injected
bilaterally into the dorsal hippocampus following context pre-exposure also
significantly reduces the facilitation effect. The same treatment given
immediately after immediate shock, however, had no effect on facilitation. These
results support theories that assume that, (a) contextual fear involves two
processes, acquiring and storing a conjunctive representation of a context and
associating that representation with fear; and (b) the hippocampus contributes
to contextual fear by participating in the storage of the memory representation
of the context. Copyright 2002 Elsevier Science B.V.
PMID: 12191817