Normal rats and rats with paleocerebellar lesions were trained to bar press for food on continuous reinforcement (CRF) and differential reinforcement of low response rates (DRL) schedules. The animals with lesions showed normal acquisition of the CRF schedule, but they exhibited a marked deficit on the DRL task. This deficit was related to overresponding which appeared to result from an inability to inhibit the response, rather than from a dysfunction in timing ability or motor capacity. The DRL deficit, however, was overcome by the introduction of a salient stimulus object (wood block) into the operant situation. Although no explicit reinforcement contingencies were placed on interaction with the stimulus object, it appeared that the wood block facilitated the development of "collateral" behaviors that served to mediate the DRL interval. These results are consistent with the suggestion that the cerebellum may contribute to the sequential organization of complex behaviors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/h0077893 | DOI Listing |
Brain Dev
April 1995
Division of Child Neurology, National Center Hospital for Mental, Nervous and Muscular Disorders, Tokyo, Japan.
We report a case of acute cerebellar ataxia (ACA) with discrete paleocerebellar clinical symptoms who underwent serial cranial magnetic resonance images not only with conventional spin echo sequences but also fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequences. The images with the latter sequences demonstrated more conspicuously the high signal intensity lesions in the superior cerebellar vermis and cerebellar peduncle than those with the former sequences. In the convalescent phase, the lesions became markedly atrophic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBoll Soc Ital Biol Sper
September 1983
The research was performed in order to study: 1) paleo and neocerebellar contributions in the sleep organization and 2) the electrical sleep activities at different time intervals during the functional compensation which follows the cerebellar lesion. Polygraphic sleep records (EEG, EMG, EOG) were performed on four subjects with surgical lesions more than 6 months old in cerebellar cortex (two subjects in paleo and two in neocerebellum). Another subject was studied before a surgical paleocerebellar lesion and at different time intervals after that (8th, 30th, 60th, and 90th day).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Comp Physiol Psychol
June 1982
Normal rats and rats with paleocerebellar lesions were trained to bar press for food on continuous reinforcement (CRF) and differential reinforcement of low response rates (DRL) schedules. The animals with lesions showed normal acquisition of the CRF schedule, but they exhibited a marked deficit on the DRL task. This deficit was related to overresponding which appeared to result from an inability to inhibit the response, rather than from a dysfunction in timing ability or motor capacity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral forms of postural ataxia can be distinguished in cerebellar lesions by quantitative analysis of stance, a paleocerebellar, a vestibulocerebellar and a neocerebellar syndrome, for each of which a different underlying pathomechanism was found. The pathognomonic anterior-posterior 3 Hz postural tremor in the paleocerebellar syndrome is caused by delayed and enhanced long latency reflexes, which result in an oscillation of the posture control system. In the beginning disease this oscillation can be provoked by rapid tilt or electrical stimulation of the tibial nerves.
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