Department of Psychology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Neuroscience. 2010 Sep 15;169(4):1689-704. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2010.06.046. Epub 2010 Jun 25.
Rats were trained to fear an auditory conditioned stimulus (CS) by pairing it with a mild electric shock (the unconditioned stimulus, or US) delivered to one eyelid. After training, the CS elicited two different conditioned fear responses from rats: a passive freezing response, and an active turning response. The balance between these two modes of conditioned responding depended upon the rat's recent history of encounters with the US. If rats had not recently encountered the US, then they responded to the CS by freezing. But after recently encountering the US, rats exhibited CS-evoked turning responses that were always directed away from the trained eyelid, even if the US had recently been delivered to the opposite (untrained) eyelid. This post-encounter turning behavior was not observed in rats that had been trained with unpaired presentations of the CS and US, indicating that even though CS-evoked turning was selectively expressed after recent encounters with the US, it was nonetheless a conditioned Pavlovian fear response that depended upon a learned association between the CS and US. Further supporting this conclusion, pharmacological inactivation experiments showed that expression of both freezing and turning behaviors depended upon lateralized circuits in the amygdala and periaqueductal gray (PAG) that are known to support expression of Pavlovian fear responses. These findings indicate that even though the ability of a CS to elicit Pavlovian fear responses depend upon the long-term history of CS-US pairings, the mode of conditioned responding (freezing versus turning in the present experiments) can be modulated by short-term factors, such as the recent history of US encounters. We discuss neural mechanisms that might mediate such short-term transitions between different modes of defensive responding, and consider how dysregulation of such mechanisms might contribute to clinical anxiety disorders.
老鼠通过将听觉条件刺激(CS)与施加于一只眼脸的轻度电击(非条件刺激,US)配对来训练其对听觉条件刺激产生恐惧。训练后,CS 从老鼠身上引出了两种不同的条件恐惧反应:被动的冻结反应和主动的转身反应。这两种条件反应模式之间的平衡取决于老鼠最近与 US 的接触史。如果老鼠最近没有遇到 US,那么它们会对 CS 做出冻结反应。但是,在最近遇到 US 之后,老鼠会表现出 CS 诱发的转身反应,这些反应总是远离受过训练的眼脸,即使 US 最近施加于未受过训练的眼脸。在未经 CS 和 US 配对呈现训练的老鼠中,没有观察到这种接触后转身行为,表明尽管 CS 诱发的转身是在最近遇到 US 后选择性表达的,但它仍然是一种条件性的巴甫洛夫恐惧反应,依赖于 CS 和 US 之间的学习关联。进一步支持这一结论的是,药理学失活实验表明,冻结和转身行为的表达都依赖于杏仁核和导水管周围灰质(PAG)中的侧化回路,这些回路已知支持巴甫洛夫恐惧反应的表达。这些发现表明,尽管 CS 引发巴甫洛夫恐惧反应的能力取决于 CS-US 配对的长期历史,但条件反应的模式(在本实验中为冻结与转身)可以通过短期因素来调节,例如最近 US 接触的历史。我们讨论了可能介导这种不同防御反应模式之间的短期转变的神经机制,并考虑了这种机制的失调如何导致临床焦虑障碍。