Author:
Corcoran Kevin A.,Maren Stephen
Abstract
After extinction of fear to a Pavlovian conditional stimulus (CS),
contextual stimuli come to regulate the expression of fear to that CS. There
is growing evidence that the context dependence of memory retrieval after
extinction involves the hippocampus. In the present experiment, we examine
whether hippocampal involvement in memory retrieval after extinction is
related to the history of CS presentations in the context used for retrieval
testing. We used infusions of muscimol to inactivate the dorsal hippocampus
(DH) during postextinction retrieval tests that were conducted in contexts
that differed in their history of CS presentations in that context. We found
that DH inactivation affected the context-dependent retrieval of extinction
(i.e., renewal) when testing occurred in a context that had no history of CS
exposure, but not in a context that reliably predicted the CS. These results
are discussed in terms of theories regarding the role of the hippocampus in
contextual memory retrieval.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
156 articles.
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