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Phantom auditory sensation in rats: An animal model for tinnitus.
271
Citations
18
References
1988
Year
PsychoacousticsNeuropsychologyAffective NeuroscienceNeurotologyAttentionRespective InjectionsSocial SciencesAuditory ScienceNeural Basis Of Auditory PerceptionSaline InjectionsHealth SciencesAuditory ProcessingSalicylate InjectionsNeuropharmacologyAuditory ResearchNervous SystemBehavioural PhysiologyNeurobiological MechanismNeurophysiologyTinnitusNeuroanatomyPhysiologyAuditory PhysiologyHearing PerceptionPhantom Auditory SensationNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemAuditory SystemAuditory Neuroscience
In order to measure tinnitus induced by sodium salicylate injections, 84 pigmented rats, distributed among 14 groups in five experiments, were used in a conditioned suppression paradigm. In Experiment 1, all groups were trained with a conditioned stimulus (CS) consisting of the offset of a continuous background noise. One group began salicylate injections before Pavlovian training, a second group started injections after training, and a control group received daily saline injections. Resistance to extinction was profound when injections started before training, but minimal when initiated after training, which suggests that salicylate-induced effects acquired differential conditioned value. In Experiment 2 we mimicked the salicylate treatments by substituting a 7 kHz tone in place of respective injections, resulting in effects equivalent to salicylate-induced behavior. In a third experiment we included a 3 kHz CS, and again replicated the salicylate findings. In Experiment 4 we decreased the motivational level, and the sequential relation between salicylate-induced effects and suppression training was retained. Finally, no salicylate effects emerged when the visual modality was used. These findings support the demonstration of phantom auditory sensations in animals.
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