Many fear conditioning studies use electric shock as the aversive stimulus. The intensity of shocks varies throughout the literature. In this study, shock intensities ranging from 0 to 1.5 mA were used, and the effects on the rats assessed by both behavioural and biochemical stress parameters. Results indicated a significant difference with respect to defaecation and freezing behaviour between controls and those animals that received a shock. Significant differences in corticosterone levels were also noted between controls and those groups that received a shock. No significant differences were found between the shock groups with regards to the stress parameters measured in our fear conditioning paradigm, indicating that the two shock groups...
Fear behaviors are important for survival, but disproportionately high levels of fear can increase t...
Stress-enhanced fear learning (SEFL) refers to the long-lasting nonassociative sensitization produce...
In a sample of 208 Holtzman-descended albino rats, we found evidence with 4 measures of conditioning...
Many fear conditioning studies use electric shock as the aversive stimulus. The intensity of shocks ...
Many fear conditioning studies use electric shock as the aversive stimulus. The intensity of shocks ...
Contextual conditioning in rats is typically quantified using startle amplitude or freezing time. Ou...
Animal studies have reported an impairing effect of stress on the recall of contextual fear memory a...
grantor: University of TorontoThere has been a renewed interest in the neural basis of fea...
Fear conditioning and shock intensity: the choice between minimizing the stress induce
Exposure to traumatic stress leads to persistent, deleterious behavioral and biological changes in b...
The effects of stress on memory formation are well documented, but very few studies have investigate...
Exposure of humans and animals to an intensely fearful experience can lead to an enduring behavioral...
E EXPERIMENTS are an out-growth of our interest in patterns of re-covery from a learned fear. Utiliz...
The interactions between an unconditioned noxious stimulus (electric shock) and a conditioned stimul...
This study was undertaken to determine the effects of preweaning signalled and unsignalled shock on ...
Fear behaviors are important for survival, but disproportionately high levels of fear can increase t...
Stress-enhanced fear learning (SEFL) refers to the long-lasting nonassociative sensitization produce...
In a sample of 208 Holtzman-descended albino rats, we found evidence with 4 measures of conditioning...
Many fear conditioning studies use electric shock as the aversive stimulus. The intensity of shocks ...
Many fear conditioning studies use electric shock as the aversive stimulus. The intensity of shocks ...
Contextual conditioning in rats is typically quantified using startle amplitude or freezing time. Ou...
Animal studies have reported an impairing effect of stress on the recall of contextual fear memory a...
grantor: University of TorontoThere has been a renewed interest in the neural basis of fea...
Fear conditioning and shock intensity: the choice between minimizing the stress induce
Exposure to traumatic stress leads to persistent, deleterious behavioral and biological changes in b...
The effects of stress on memory formation are well documented, but very few studies have investigate...
Exposure of humans and animals to an intensely fearful experience can lead to an enduring behavioral...
E EXPERIMENTS are an out-growth of our interest in patterns of re-covery from a learned fear. Utiliz...
The interactions between an unconditioned noxious stimulus (electric shock) and a conditioned stimul...
This study was undertaken to determine the effects of preweaning signalled and unsignalled shock on ...
Fear behaviors are important for survival, but disproportionately high levels of fear can increase t...
Stress-enhanced fear learning (SEFL) refers to the long-lasting nonassociative sensitization produce...
In a sample of 208 Holtzman-descended albino rats, we found evidence with 4 measures of conditioning...