Abstract
In a series of experiments with rats, using evoked field potentials, the influence of massed trial training in 2-way shuttle box avoidance and step-through passive avoidance tasks was studied on the synaptic excitability of the lateral septum (LS) neurons and on the induction of long-term potentiation in the lateral septum in vivo. The majority of rats that attained a high performance level in the shuttle box task exhibited, after the shuttle box training, a long-lasting enhancement of synaptic excitability of lateral septum neurons, whereas most of the rats with low performance in the shuttle box showed a long-lasting depression in the LS synaptic excitability. Both types of excitability changes disappeared within 24 h. Neither the first habituation session in the passive avoidance apparatus nor the subsequent one-trial learning in passive avoidance task has a marked influence on lateral septum synaptic excitability. Both high-performance and low-performance rats exhibited a long-term potentiation (LTP)-like potentiation of synaptic excitability of the lateral septum neurons after frequency stimulation of the fimbria fibers although the amount of LTP in high performance rats was slightly higher than that in low performance animals.
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