Publication | Closed Access
Effects of hippocampal lesions in overshadowing and blocking procedures.
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Citations
28
References
2003
Year
Cognitive ScienceNeuropsychologyHippocampal LesionsTarget StimulusExperimental PsychologyAssociative Memory (Psychology)Inhibitory ProcessMemoryNeuropharmacologyIbotenic Acid LesionsNeuroscienceConditioningCognitive NeuroscienceExplicit MemorySocial SciencesExperimental Analysis Of Behavior
The effects of ibotenic acid lesions of the hippocampus on overshadowing and blocking were examined in a Pavlovian appetitive conditioning experiment with rats. In a standard test of performance to the overshadowed or blocked target stimulus, sham-lesioned rats displayed both of these stimulus-selection phenomena. Rats with hippocampal lesions showed normal blocking, but no overshadowing. Subsequent inhibitory learning about the target stimulus was slower after overshadowing or blocking procedures than after a control procedure in sham-lesioned rats, but not in lesioned rats. These results suggest that exposure to these procedures can induce hippocampally mediated losses in conditioned stimulus associability (learning rate parameter), even when those losses are not a major determinant of the stimulus-selection effects themselves.
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