Deupree D, Coppock W, Willer H
J Comp Physiol Psychol. 1982 Aug;96(4):557-62. doi: 10.1037/h0077908.
Studies have shown hippocampal rhythmic slow activity (H-RSA) to reflect both learning and memory processes across a variety of species and conditioning procedures. In order to investigate these relations further. H-RSA was manipulated by medial septal (MS) stimulation directly before training rats for light/dark discrimination in a T-maze. Rats that had H-RSA increased learned the discrimination significantly faster than those that had H-RSA blocked and control rats. In addition, increase in H-RSA before training was found to correlate with speed of learning. The evidence of this study is consistent with results of other studies showing septal-hippocampal interaction during learning. The results also support the view that H-RSA may be a neurophysiological representation of learning and memory processes.
研究表明,海马节律性慢活动(H-RSA)能反映多种物种和条件作用程序中的学习与记忆过程。为了进一步研究这些关系,在训练大鼠于T迷宫中进行明暗辨别之前,通过内侧隔区(MS)刺激来操控H-RSA。H-RSA增加的大鼠比H-RSA被阻断的大鼠及对照大鼠显著更快地学会了辨别。此外,发现训练前H-RSA的增加与学习速度相关。本研究的证据与其他显示学习过程中隔区-海马相互作用的研究结果一致。这些结果也支持了H-RSA可能是学习和记忆过程的神经生理学表征这一观点。