Abstract
Stressful life events can have profound effects on our cognitive and motor
abilities, from those that could be construed as adaptive to those not so. In
this review, I discuss the general notion that acute stressful experience
necessarily impairs our abilities to learn and remember. The effects of stress
on operant conditioning, that is, learned helplessness, as well as those on
classical conditioning procedures are discussed in the context of performance
and adaptation. Studies indicating sex differences in learning during
stressful times are discussed, as are those attributing different responses to
the existence of multiple memory systems and nonlinear relationships. The
intent of this review is to highlight the apparent plasticity of the stress
response, how it might have evolved to affect both performance and learning
processes, and the potential problems with interpreting stress effects on
learning as either good or bad. An appreciation for its plasticity may provide
new avenues for investigating its underlying neuronal mechanisms.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
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