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Dissociating context and space within the hippocampus: Effects of complete, dorsal, and ventral excitotoxic hippocampal lesions on conditioned freezing and spatial learning.
335
Citations
35
References
1999
Year
NeuropsychologySpatial LearningBrain MechanismAffective NeuroscienceBrain OrganizationSocial SciencesMemoryCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceCortical RemodelingVentral LesionsRehabilitationSynaptic PlasticityNeurobiological MechanismNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyConditioned FreezingSelective DamageNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicineVentral Hippocampus
Rats with complete excitotoxic hippocampal lesions or selective damage to the dorsal or ventral hippocampus were compared with controls on measures of contextually conditioned freezing in a signaled shock procedure and on a spatial water-maze task. Complete and ventral lesions produced equivalent, significant anterograde deficits in conditioned freezing relative to both dorsal lesions and controls. Complete hippocampal lesions impaired water-maze performance; in contrast, ventral lesions improved performance relative to the dorsal group, which was itself unexpectedly unimpaired relative to controls. Thus, the partial lesion effects seen in the 2 tasks never resembled each other. Anterograde impairments in contextual freezing and spatial learning do not share a common underlying neural basis; complete and ventral lesions may induce anterograde contextual freezing impairments by enhancing locomotor activity under conditions of mild stress.
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