Miller Daniel Paul, Allen Michael Todd, Servatius Richard J
Neuroscience Department, Carthage College, Kenosha, WI, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, Stress and Motivated Behavior Institute, Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY, United States.
Front Psychiatry. 2020 Aug 19;11:848. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00848. eCollection 2020.
Individual differences or vulnerabilities must exist which bias some individuals toward psychopathology while others remain resilient in the face of trauma. Recent work has studied the effects of uncertainty on individuals expressing behavioral inhibition (BI). The current study extended this work with uncertainty to Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats which are a behaviorally inhibited inbred strain that models learning vulnerabilities for anxiety disorders and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). WKY rats exhibit superior avoidance performance in a signaled bar press avoidance task in which a tone conditioned stimulus (CS) signals a foot shock unconditional stimulus (US) when compared with non-inhibited Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. In addition, WKY rats express enhanced eyeblink conditioning. Recent work with behaviorally inhibited humans has indicated that this enhanced eyeblink conditioning is more evident in conditions that insert CS- or US-alone trials into CS-US paired training, resulting in uncertain and suboptimal learning conditions. The current study examined the effects of partial predictability training, in which the CS signaled the US only one-half of the time, on the acquisition and expression of avoidance. Standard training with a fixed 60-s CS which predicted shock on 100% of trials was compared with training in which the CS predicted shock on 50% of trials (partial predictability) using a pseudorandom schedule. As expected, WKY rats acquired avoidance responses faster and to a greater degree than SD rats. Partial predictability of the US essentially reduced SD rats to escape responding. Partial predictability also reduced avoidance in WKY rats; however, adjusting avoidance rates for the number of potential pairings of the CS and US early in training suggested a similar degree of avoidance expression late in the last session of training. Enhanced active avoidance expression, even in uncertain learning conditions, can be interpreted as behaviorally inhibited WKY rats responding to the expectancy of the shock by avoiding, whereas non-inhibited SD rats were responding to the presence of the shock by escaping. Future work should explore how WKY and SD rats as well as behaviorally inhibited humans acquire and extinguish avoidance responses in uncertain learning situations.
个体差异或易感性必然存在,这使得一些人更容易出现精神病理学问题,而另一些人在面对创伤时仍能保持 resilient(此处原文有误,推测为“resilient”,意为“有适应力的”)。最近的研究探讨了不确定性对表现出行为抑制(BI)的个体的影响。当前的研究将这种关于不确定性的研究扩展到了Wistar Kyoto(WKY)大鼠,这是一种行为抑制的近交系大鼠,可模拟焦虑症和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的学习易感性。与未受抑制的Sprague-Dawley(SD)大鼠相比,WKY大鼠在有信号的压杆回避任务中表现出卓越的回避性能,在该任务中,一个音调条件刺激(CS)预示着足部电击非条件刺激(US)。此外,WKY大鼠表现出增强的眨眼条件反射。最近对有行为抑制的人类的研究表明,这种增强的眨眼条件反射在将单独的CS或US试验插入CS-US配对训练的条件下更为明显,从而导致不确定和次优的学习条件。当前的研究考察了部分可预测性训练的效果,即CS仅在一半的时间预示US,对回避行为的习得和表现的影响。将固定60秒的CS在100%的试验中预示电击的标准训练与使用伪随机时间表使CS在50%的试验中预示电击(部分可预测性)的训练进行比较。正如预期的那样,WKY大鼠比SD大鼠更快且更强烈地习得回避反应。US的部分可预测性基本上使SD大鼠转变为逃避反应。部分可预测性也降低了WKY大鼠的回避行为;然而,根据训练早期CS和US潜在配对的数量调整回避率表明,在训练的最后阶段后期,回避表现的程度相似。即使在不确定的学习条件下,增强的主动回避表现也可被解释为行为抑制的WKY大鼠通过回避对电击的预期做出反应,而未受抑制的SD大鼠则通过逃避对电击的出现做出反应。未来的研究应该探索WKY和SD大鼠以及有行为抑制的人类在不确定的学习情境中如何习得和消退回避反应。