Abstract

Research has shown differences in the neural mechanisms that support trace and delay eyeblink conditioning. The present experiment furthered this investigation by examining the effect of electrolytic fornix lesions on acquisition of trace and delay eyeblink conditioning in the rat. Importantly, the conditioned stimulus (CS) for trace conditioning was a standard tone-on cue, and the CS for delay conditioning was either a tone-off or tone-on CS. The results showed that fornix lesions impaired trace-, but not delay conditioning in rats trained with the tone-on CS or tone-off CS. The findings are consistent with previous studies that found trace-, but not delay eyeblink conditioning is a hippocampal dependent form of associative learning. Our results also indicate that the neural pathways for tone-off delay conditioning and tone-on trace conditioning are different, even though the structural composition of a tone-off CS and the trace conditioning interval are the same cue (i.e., the absence of sound). These findings indicate that the absence of a sensory cue (i.e., tone-off CS) and the presence of a sensory cue (i.e., tone-on CS) have equivalent associative value and effectiveness for engaging the neural pathways that support delay eyeblink conditioning.

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