Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience (Dec 2013)

Appetitive behavioral traits and stimulus intensity influence maintenance of conditioned fear

  • Megan eOlshavsky,
  • Carolyn E. Jones,
  • Hongjoo J Lee,
  • Marie H Monfils

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2013.00179
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Individual differences in appetitive learning have long been reported, and generally divide into two classes of responses: cue- vs. reward-directed. The influence of cue- vs. reward-directed phenotypes on aversive cue processing, is less well understood. In the current study, we first categorized rats based on their predominant cue-directed orienting responses during appetitive Pavlovian conditioning. Then, we investigated the effect of phenotype on the latency to exit a familiar dark environment and enter an unfamiliar illuminated open field. Next, we examined whether the two phenotypes responded differently to a reconsolidation updating manipulation (retrieval+extinction) after fear conditioning. We report that the rats with a cue-directed (orienting) phenotype differentially respond to the open field, and also to fear conditioning, depending on US-intensity. In addition, our findings suggest that, regardless of appetitive phenotype or shock intensity, extinction within the reconsolidation window prevents spontaneous recovery of fear.

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