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Factors governing one-trial contextual conditioning

  • Published: September 1990
  • Volume 18, pages 264–270, (1990)
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Factors governing one-trial contextual conditioning
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  • Michael S. Fanselow1 
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Abstract

When a rat was placed in a chamber and shortly thereafter received a single footshock, it showed conditional freezing upon re-exposure to that chamber but not a different one (Experiment 1). Experiments 2–4 showed that the probability of this freezing decreased linearly with decreases in the delay between placement in the chamber and shock delivery. With very short delays (e.g., less than 27 sec), there was no freezing. Experiments 2 and 3 demonstrated that a 2-mm pre-exposure to the chamber, 24 h prior to shock delivery, reduced the minimum delay necessary to successfully condition freezing. Experiment 4 demonstrated that shorter delays were successful in conditioning freezing if a salient tone was a component of the contextual stimulus. The changes in freezing caused by delay interval and preexposure did not simply reflect the total time in the context, suggesting that there may be two requirements that place temporal restrictions on the conditioning of the freezing response. One is satisfied by sufficient exposure, whether or not that exposure is contiguous with shock. The second requirement is for a small amount of context exposure that is contiguous with shock.

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Author information

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Department of Psychology, University of California, 90024-1563, Los Angeles, CA

    Michael S. Fanselow

Authors
  1. Michael S. Fanselow
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Additional information

This research was funded by National Institute of Mental Health Grant MH39786.

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Cite this article

Fanselow, M.S. Factors governing one-trial contextual conditioning. Animal Learning & Behavior 18, 264–270 (1990). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03205285

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  • Received: 27 February 1990

  • Accepted: 06 June 1990

  • Issue date: September 1990

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03205285

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Keywords

  • Conditional Stimulus
  • Perceptual Learning
  • Delay Interval
  • Freezing Response
  • Shock Delivery
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