Learning Performance of Normal and MutantDrosophilaafter Repeated Conditioning Trials with Discrete Stimuli
Open Access
- 15 April 2000
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 20 (8) , 2944-2953
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.20-08-02944.2000
Abstract
A new olfactory conditioning procedure is described using short training trials with discrete presentation of conditioned stimuli (CS) and unconditioned stimuli (US). A short odor presentation along with a single-shock stimulus produced modest but reliable and reproducible learning. Multiple trials presented sequentially improved performance with increasing trial number. Trial spacing had a significant impact on performance. Two trials presented with a short intertrial interval (ITI) produced no improvement over a single trial; two trials with a 15 min ITI significantly boosted performance. This effect required two associative trials, because substituting one of the trials with the CS alone, US alone, or an unpaired CS–US failed to boost performance. The increase in initial performance with two trials decayed within 15 min after training. Thus, the effect is short-lived. The utility of using a battery of tests, including a single short trial, two massed trials, and two spaced trials, to investigate parameters of memory formation in several mutants was demonstrated.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interactive contributions of intracellular calcium and protein phosphatases to massed-trials learning deficits in Hermissenda.Behavioral Neuroscience, 1999
- Characteristics of associative learning in younger and older adults: Evidence from an episodic priming paradigm.Psychology and Aging, 1996
- Preferential expression in mushroom bodies of the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A and its role in learning and memoryNeuron, 1993
- Preferential expression of the drosophila rutabaga gene in mushroom bodies, neural centers for learning in insectsNeuron, 1992
- The cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase encoded by the drosophila dunce gene is concentrated in the mushroom body neuropilNeuron, 1991
- Classical conditioning and retention in normal and mutantDrosophila melanogasterJournal of Comparative Physiology A, 1985
- Dunce mutants of Drosophila melanogaster: mutants defective in the cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase enzyme system.The Journal of cell biology, 1981
- Defect in cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase due to the dunce mutation of learning in Drosophila melanogasterNature, 1981
- Long-Term Habituation of a Defensive Withdrawal Reflex in AplysiaScience, 1972
- Rank order as a psycho-physical method.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1931