Literature DB >> 6832265

Conditioning of single units in visual association cortex: cell-specific behavior within a small population.

F Morrell, T J Hoeppner, L de Toledo-Morrell.   

Abstract

These experiments examine the interrelationships between the activity of adjacent neurons during learning. Does learning depend on coherent behavior in a population of neurons or does it depend on particular neurons engaging in a particular activity at specific times? A second purpose was to examine specificity in response modification as a function of reinforcement contingency. Cells from visual association cortex of locally anesthetized, paralyzed cats and rabbits were studied with extracellular microelectrodes capable of recording single and multiunit activity, as well as local field potentials. Multiunit records were fractionated by amplitude "windows" discrimination. Pavlovian discriminative conditioning procedures were used to evaluate selective plasticity. Cells that were activated by at least two different visual stimuli were selected. Only one of the effective stimuli was paired with foot-shock (reinforcement). Of the 180 cells or cell clusters studied, 27% exhibited conditioned modification to the reinforced stimulus (CS+) and 19% changed their response pattern to the unreinforced stimulus (CS-). None of the well isolated cells showed conditioning to both CS+ and CS-. Thus, cellular plasticity was specific to reinforcement contingency. These results provide a first demonstration of reinforcement-dependent functional distinctiveness at the neuronal level. Some cells showed no alteration of response pattern despite a most prolonged conditioning procedure. Neighboring cells, responsive to the same stimuli, revealed increases or decreases in firing rate, selective changes in the latency or amplitude of single response peaks, or the appearance of one or more new peaks as a function of conditioning. Rarely did adjacent cells show the same type of alteration when alteration occurred; there was no general tendency toward coherent firing patterns as conditioning proceeded.

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Mesh:

Year:  1983        PMID: 6832265     DOI: 10.1016/0014-4886(83)90010-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Neurol        ISSN: 0014-4886            Impact factor:   5.330


  3 in total

1.  Model of cortical organization embodying a basis for a theory of information processing and memory recall.

Authors:  G L Shaw; D J Silverman; J C Pearson
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1985-04       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Associative recall properties of the trion model of cortical organization.

Authors:  D J Silverman; G L Shaw; J C Pearson
Journal:  Biol Cybern       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 2.086

3.  Validating TDP1 as an Inhibition Target for the Development of Chemosensitizers for Camptothecin-Based Chemotherapy Drugs.

Authors:  Euphemia Leung; Jinal Patel; Jennifer A Hollywood; Ayesha Zafar; Petr Tomek; David Barker; Lisa I Pilkington; Michelle van Rensburg; Ries J Langley; Nuala A Helsby; Christopher J Squire; Bruce C Baguley; William A Denny; Jóhannes Reynisson; Ivanhoe K H Leung
Journal:  Oncol Ther       Date:  2021-06-23
  3 in total

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