| Literature DB >> 24624232 |
Blake T Thomas1, William B Levy2.
Abstract
The present article develops quantitative behavioral and neurophysiological predictions for rabbits trained on an air-puff version of the trace-interval classical conditioning paradigm. Using a minimal hippocampal model, consisting of 8,000 primary cells sparsely and randomly interconnected as a model of hippocampal region CA-3, the simulations identify conditions which produce a clear split in the number of trials individual animals should need to learn a criterion response. A trace interval that is difficult to learn, but still learnable by half the experimental population, produces a bimodal population of learners: an early learner group and a late learner group. The model predicts that late learners are characterized by two kinds of CA-3 neuronal activity fluctuations that are not seen in the early learners. As is typical in our minimal hippocampal models, the off-rate constant of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor receptor gives a timescale to the model that leads to a temporally quantifiable behavior, the learnable trace interval.Entities:
Keywords: Hippocampus; Neural network; Sequence learning; Trace conditioning
Year: 2013 PMID: 24624232 PMCID: PMC3945458 DOI: 10.1007/s11571-013-9271-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Neurodyn ISSN: 1871-4080 Impact factor: 5.082