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A bout of voluntary running enhances context conditioned fear, its extinction, and its reconsolidation

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:33 authored by Joyce Siette, Amy Reichelt, R. Westbrook
Three experiments used rats to examine the effect of a single bout of voluntary activity (wheel running) on the acquisition, extinction, and reconsolidation of context conditioned fear. In Experiment 1, rats provided with access to a wheel for 3 h immediately before or after a shocked exposure to a context froze more when tested in that context than rats provided with access to the wheels 6 h after the shocked exposure or rats not provided with access to the wheels. In Experiment 2, rats provided with access to the wheels immediately before or after a nonshocked exposure to the conditioned context froze less when tested in that context than rats provided with access to the wheels 6 h after the nonshocked exposure or rats not provided with access to the wheels. In Experiment 3, rats provided with access to wheels immediately after an extended nonshocked exposure to the conditioned context again froze less, whereas rats provided with access to the wheels after a brief nonshocked exposure froze more on the subsequent test than sedentary controls. These results show that a single bout of running can enhance acquisition, extinction, and reconsolidation of context conditioned fear. © 2014 Siette et al.

History

Journal

Learning and Memory

Volume

21

Issue

2

Start page

73

End page

81

Total pages

9

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Siette et al. This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; Creative Commons

Former Identifier

2006068871

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-12-14

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