Reducing shock imminence eliminates poor avoidance in rats.

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NYU School of Medicine, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York, New York 10016, USA.

Published: July 2020

In signaled active avoidance (SigAA), rats learn to suppress Pavlovian freezing and emit actions to remove threats and prevent footshocks. SigAA is critical for understanding aversively motivated instrumental behavior and anxiety-related active coping. However, with standard protocols ∼25% of rats exhibit high freezing and poor avoidance. This has dampened enthusiasm for the paradigm and stalled progress. We demonstrate that reducing shock imminence with long-duration warning signals leads to greater freezing suppression and perfect avoidance in all subjects. This suggests that instrumental SigAA mechanisms evolved to cope with distant harm and protocols that promote inflexible Pavlovian reactions are poorly designed to study avoidance.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7301752PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/lm.051557.120DOI Listing

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