Publication | Closed Access
Retrograde Amnesia Produced by Electroconvulsive Shock after Reactivation of a Consolidated Memory Trace
868
Citations
7
References
1968
Year
NeuropsychologyElectroconvulsive ShockAffective NeuroscienceConsolidated Memory TraceExplicit MemorySocial SciencesPsychologyFear-conditioning TrialMemoryNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceMemory SystemMemory AnalysisNervous SystemRetrograde Amnesia ProducedMemory Trace ConsolidationFear ResponseNeurophysiologyMemory LossElectrophysiologyNeuroscienceBrain ElectrophysiologyMedicine
Rats had a memory loss of a fear response when they received an electroconvulsive shock 24 hours after the fear-conditioning trial and preceded by a brief presentation of the conditioned stimulus. No such loss occurred when the conditioned stimulus was not presented. The memory loss in animals given electroconvulsive shock 24 hours after conditioning was, furthermore, as great as that displayed in animals given electroconvulsive shock immediately after conditioning. This result throws doubt on the assertion that electroconvulsive shock exerts a selective amnesic effect on recently acquired memories and thus that electroconvulsive shock produces amnesia solely through interference with memory trace consolidation.
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