4.0 Article

Whisking as a voluntary response: operant control of whisking parameters and effects of whisker denervation

Journal

SOMATOSENSORY AND MOTOR RESEARCH
Volume 20, Issue 3-4, Pages 179-189

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08990220310001623031-411

Keywords

whisking; conditioning; operant; deafferentation; movement; whiskers

Categories

Funding

  1. NIMH NIH HHS [MH-08366] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [NS-37263] Funding Source: Medline

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The rat's ability to vary its whisking strategies to meet the functional demands of a discriminative task suggests that whisking may be characterized as a voluntary behavior--an operant--and like other operants, should be modifiable by appropriate manipulations of response-reinforcer contingencies. To test this hypothesis we have used high-resolution, optoelectronic real-time recording procedures to monitor the movements of individual whiskers and reinforce specific movement parameters (amplitude, frequency). In one operant paradigm ( N = 9) whisks with protractions above a specified amplitude were reinforced (Variable Interval 30 s) in the presence of a tone, but extinguished (EXT) in its absence. In a second paradigm ( N = 3), rats were reinforced on two different VI schedules (VI-20s/VI-120s) signaled, respectively, by the presence or absence of the tone. Selective reinforcement of whisking movements maintained the behavior over many weeks of testing and brought it under stimulus and schedule control. Subjects in the first paradigm learned to increase responding in the presence of the tone and inhibit responding in its absence. In the second paradigm, subjects whisked at significantly different rates in the two stimulus conditions. Bilateral deafferentation of the whisker pad did not impair conditioned whisking or disrupt discrimination behavior. Our results confirm the hypothesis that rodent whisking has many of the properties of an operant response. The ability to bring whisking movement parameters under operant control should facilitate electrophysiological and lesion/behavioral studies of this widely used model sensorimotor system.

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