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Dissociating context and space within the hippocampus: effects of complete, dorsal, and ventral excitotoxic hippocampal lesions on conditioned freezing and spatial learning.

Abstract:
Rats with complete excitotoxic hippocampal lesions or selective damage to the dorsal or ventral hippocampus were compared with controls on measures of contextually conditioned freezing in a signaled shock procedure and on a spatial water-maze task. Complete and ventral lesions produced equivalent, significant anterograde deficits in conditioned freezing relative to both dorsal lesions and controls. Complete hippocampal lesions impaired water-maze performance; in contrast, ventral lesions improved performance relative to the dorsal group, which was itself unexpectedly unimpaired relative to controls. Thus, the partial lesion effects seen in the 2 tasks never resembled each other. Anterograde impairments in contextual freezing and spatial learning do not share a common underlying neural basis; complete and ventral lesions may induce anterograde contextual freezing impairments by enhancing locomotor activity under conditions of mild stress.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1037/0735-7044.113.6.1189

Authors

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Experimental Psychology
Role:
Author


Journal:
Behavioral neuroscience More from this journal
Volume:
113
Issue:
6
Pages:
1189-1203
Publication date:
1999-12-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1939-0084
ISSN:
0735-7044


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:28993
UUID:
uuid:ee00bc53-a111-4a5b-9301-8d4e430a5c95
Local pid:
pubs:28993
Source identifiers:
28993
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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