Luber B, Balsam P, Nguyen T, Gross M, Lisanby S H
New York State Psychiatric Institute and Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2007 Nov;183(3):361-9. doi: 10.1007/s00221-007-1052-7. Epub 2007 Jul 17.
This study examined whether brain responses to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) would be amenable to classical conditioning. Motor cortex in human participants was stimulated with TMS pulses, which elicited a peripheral motor response in the form of a motor evoked potential (MEP). The TMS pulses were paired with audio-visual cues that served as conditioned stimuli. Over the course of training, MEPs following the conditioned stimuli decreased in amplitude. Two experiments demonstrated that the attenuated response only occurred when the TMS was preceded by the conditioned stimulus. Unsignaled TMS and TMS preceded by a cue that was not previously paired did not attenuate the response. The experiments demonstrate that the modulation of the motor response depended on the prior pairings of the conditioned stimuli and TMS and that the effects were stimulus specific. Thus we demonstrate here, for the first time, that TMS can serve as the unconditioned stimulus in Pavlovian conditioning.
本研究考察了大脑对经颅磁刺激(TMS)的反应是否适合经典条件作用。对人类参与者的运动皮层施加TMS脉冲,引发以运动诱发电位(MEP)形式出现的外周运动反应。TMS脉冲与作为条件刺激的视听线索配对。在训练过程中,条件刺激后的MEP振幅降低。两项实验表明,只有当TMS之前有条件刺激时,才会出现反应减弱。无信号的TMS以及之前未配对的线索之前的TMS并未使反应减弱。实验表明,运动反应的调节取决于条件刺激和TMS之前的配对,且这些效应具有刺激特异性。因此,我们首次在此证明,TMS可作为巴甫洛夫条件作用中的无条件刺激。