EFFECTS OF MODULATING TONE FREQUENCY, INTENSITY, AND DURATION ON THE CLASSICALLY-CONDITIONED RABBIT NICTITATING-MEMBRANE RESPONSE

Citation
Ej. Kehoe et al., EFFECTS OF MODULATING TONE FREQUENCY, INTENSITY, AND DURATION ON THE CLASSICALLY-CONDITIONED RABBIT NICTITATING-MEMBRANE RESPONSE, Psychobiology, 23(2), 1995, pp. 103-115
Citations number
61
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology,Psychology
Journal title
ISSN journal
08896313
Volume
23
Issue
2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
103 - 115
Database
ISI
SICI code
0889-6313(1995)23:2<103:EOMTFI>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Theories of conditioning commonly assume that the conditioned stimulus (CS) activates a cascade of internal stimuli that govern the conditio ned response (CR) on a moment-by-moment basis. As a means of manipulat ing the internal stimuli, in the present experiments we conducted dela y conditioning using a tone CS of constant intensity and frequency. Ho wever, the subjects were tested with tones during which the frequency (Experiment 1) or intensity (Experiment 2) either increased or decreas ed in a continuous fashion over an 800-msec period. The experiments re vealed that the test stimuli dramatically accelerated the recruitment of the CR. That is, both the initiation and peak of the CR occurred se veral hundred milliseconds earlier than that seen with the constant to ne. CR likelihood and CR amplitude showed modest reductions. A third e xperiment entailed test manipulations of tone duration, which yielded only small changes in the CR's time course. The results are discussed with respect to real-time mechanisms of classical conditioning and the ir neural substrates in the encoding of pure tones.