Stress-induced memory enhancement for inhibitory fear conditioning in rats
Citations Over Time
Abstract
The retroactive effects of stress on memory have not received a great deal of empirical attention; however, the research that has been conducted has reported both positive and negative effects of stress on memorial processes. The goal of this study was to examine the effects of a naturalistic Stressor—an intense bout of exercise—on memory for inhibitory fear conditioning in rats. Experiment 1 investigated the retroactive effect of a stressful swim treatment on memory for passive avoidance (PA) training. Rats that received an immediate posttraining swim treatment demonstrated a significant enhancement in performance when tested for retention 24 h later. Furthermore, the enhancing effect of the swim treatment was time dependent: Rats receiving the swim treatment 15 min after PA training no longer exhibited reliably better scores than did rats not receiving the swim treatment. Experiment 2 used preexposures to control for the possibility that the swim treatment was enhancing avoidance scores by acting as a punisher rather than a memory modulator. Results indicate that both the group that was preexposed and the group that was not preexposed showed reliably higher scores than did a group of animals receiving only PA training, thus replicating Experiment 1. Furthermore, the results of Experiment 2 suggest that swimming was not simply acting as a punishing agent, since preexposures to the treatment did not attenuate its memory-enhancing properties. The possible role of stress-related hormones on memory processes is considered.
Related Papers
- → Appraisals, Coping and Affective and Behavioral Reactions to Academic Stressors(2012)20 cited
- → Dysphoric Responses to a Naturalistic Stressor: Interactive Effects of Hope and Defense Style(2005)24 cited
- → Adolescent psychological and physiological responses to frustration- and anxiety-provoking stressors(2019)6 cited
- → Evaluative conditioning affects the subsequent acquisition of differential fear conditioning as indexed by electrodermal responding and stimulus evaluations(2019)4 cited
- → Changing CS features alters evaluative responses in evaluative conditioning(2012)8 cited