In the conditioned magazine approach paradigm, rats are exposed to a contingent relationship between a conditioned stimulus (CS) and the delivery of food (the unconditioned stimulus, US). As the rats learn the CS-US association, they make frequent anticipatory head entries into the food magazine (the conditioned response, CR) during the CS. Conventionally, this is considered to be a Pavlovian paradigm because food is contingent on the CS and not on the performance of CRs during the CS. However, because magazine entries during the CS are reliably followed by food, the increase in frequency of those responses may involve adventitious ("superstitious") instrumental conditioning. The existing evidence, from experiments using an omission schedule to eliminate the possibility of instrumental conditioning (B. J. Farwell & J. J. Ayres, 1979, Stimulus-reinforcer and response-reinforcer relations in the control of conditioned appetitive headpoking (goal tracking) in rats. Learning and Motivation, 10, 295-312; P. C. Holland, 1979, Differential effects of omission contingencies on various components of Pavlovian appetitive conditioned responding in rats. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 5, 178-193), is ambiguous: rats acquire magazine CRs despite the omission schedule, demonstrating that the response does not depend on instrumental conditioning, but the response rate is greatly depressed compared with that of rats trained on a yoked schedule, consistent with a contribution from instrumental conditioning under normal (nonomission) schedules. Here we describe experiments in which rats were trained on feature-positive or feature-negative type discriminations between trials that were reinforced on an omission schedule versus trials reinforced on a yoked schedule. The experiments show that the difference in responding between omission and yoked schedules is due to suppression of responding under the omission schedule rather than an elevation of responding under the yoked schedule. We conclude that magazine responses during the CS are largely or entirely Pavlovian CRs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0031315 | DOI Listing |
J Exp Anal Behav
March 2025
Behavioral Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Boğaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey.
Robots are increasingly used alongside Skinner boxes to train animals in operant conditioning tasks. Similarly, animals are being employed in artificial intelligence research to train various algorithms. However, both types of experiments rely on unidirectional learning, where one partner-the animal or the robot-acts as the teacher and the other as the student.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
March 2025
Department of Neurobiology, Heersink School of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35233, USA. Electronic address:
While the ability of an animal to rapidly learn to detect and avoid threats is critical for survival, previous research has focused on post-learning time periods. A new computational study now reveals how prefrontal cortex neural population dynamics underlie rapid threat avoidance learning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia
March 2025
Department of Physiology, Niigata University School of Medicine, Niigata, Japan.
Objective: Clinical investigators have hypothesized that interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) generated by hypothalamic hamartoma (HH) lead to cognitive dysfunction in patients with drug-resistant gelastic seizures. Herein we provide causal evidence supporting this hypothesis by demonstrating that excitatory neural bursts, when propagating from the HH to the mediodorsal thalamus during the encoding period, impair working memory.
Methods: By employing channelrhodopsin-2 photostimulation, we induced excessive neural excitation in Long-Evans rats, resembling IEDs, at the axon terminals of the lateral hypothalamus projecting toward the mediodorsal thalamus and prelimbic cortex.
Clin Psychol Psychother
March 2025
University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Bereavement can precipitate severe mental health problems, including major depressive disorder and prolonged grief disorder. Rumination is a risk factor of post-loss mental health problems, and as such, a better understanding of its working mechanisms may inform clinical practice. Rumination is theorized to take up time and increase feelings of hopelessness, leading to inactivity and social withdrawal, which in turn fuels post-loss psychopathology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dorsomedial striatum (DMS) is primarily recognized for regulating goal-directed reward-seeking behaviors, while the dorsolateral striatum (DLS) is predominantly associated with movement and habitual behaviors. In this study, we sought to investigate two pathways, direct medium spiny neuron (dMSN) and indirect medium spiny neuron (iMSN) in the two dorsal striatal subregions (DMS and DLS) in ethanol-seeking and drinking behaviors. Here, we selectively ablated iMSN and iMSN and trained mice to exhibit goal-directed and habitual reward-seeking behaviors using random ratio (RR) and random interval (RI) operant conditioning, respectively.
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