4.6 Article

The role of context conditioning in the reinstatement of responding to an alcohol-predictive conditioned stimulus

期刊

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
卷 423, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113686

关键词

Pavlovian conditioning; Conditioned approach; Extinction; Cue; Relapse; Appetitive

资金

  1. Canadian Institution of Health Research [MOP-137030]
  2. Fonds de la recherche en sante Quebec
  3. Faculty of Arts and Science at Concordia University
  4. Fonds de recherche du Quebec-Nature et Technologies doctoral fellowship
  5. Concordia Undergraduate Summer Research Award

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This study examines the reinstatement of conditioned responding elicited by an appetitive conditioned stimulus (CS) through re-exposure to an unconditioned stimulus (US) and finds that the reinstatement is driven by an excitatory association formed between the US and the context in which the US was ingested.
Re-exposure to an unconditioned stimulus (US) can reinstate extinguished conditioned responding elicited by a conditioned stimulus (CS). We tested the hypothesis that the reinstatement of responding to an appetitive CS is driven by an excitatory association formed between the US and the context that the US was ingested in during US re-exposure. Male, Long-Evans rats were acclimated to drinking alcohol (15%, v/v) in the home-cage, then trained to associate an auditory CS with an alcohol-US that was delivered into a fluid port for oral intake. During subsequent extinction sessions, the CS was presented as before, but without alcohol. After extinction, rats were re-exposed to alcohol as in training, but without the CS (alcohol re-exposure). 24 h later at test, the CS was presented as in training, but without alcohol. First, we tested the effect of extinguishing the context-alcohol association, formed during alcohol re-exposure, on reinstatement. Conducting four context extinction sessions across four days (spaced extinction) after the alcohol re-exposure session did not impact reinstatement. However, four context extinction sessions conducted across two days (massed extinction) prevented reinstatement. Next, we conducted alcohol re-exposure in a context that either differed from, or was the same as, the test context. One alcohol re-exposure session in a different context did not affect reinstatement, however, three alcohol re-exposure sessions in a different context significantly reduced reinstatement during the first CS trial. These results partially support the view that a context-US association formed during US re-exposure drives the reinstatement of responding to an appetitive, alcohol-predictive CS.

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