Abstract

In Experiment 1, classical conditioning of the rabbit's nictitating membrane response (NMR) was accomplished by pairing tone and light conditioned stimuli (CSs) with a shock unconditioned stimulus (UCS). MDA impaired the acquisition of conditioned responses (CR) to a tone-CS, while significantly enhancing CR acquisition to a light-CS. Experiment 2, employing explicitly unpaired CS, UCS training, revealed no reliable effects of MDA upon nonassociative processes. Subsequent efforts determined if MDA's CR acquisition effects resulted from alterations in sensory processing of the CS, UCS, and/or UCR motor functioning. Specifically, it was determined that MDA: (a) increased the tone-CS intensity threshold for eliciting CRs (Experiment 3); (b) attenuated the tone-induced reflex modification of the unconditioned NMR (Experiment 4); and (c) enhanced UCR frequency at varying UCS intensities (Experiment 5). It was concluded that MDA's effect upon CR acquisition reflected the drug's effects upon CS and UCS/UCR processing and thereby altered the ability of these components of conditioning to enter into associative learning.

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