Long-term retention of learning-induced receptive-field plasticity in the auditory cortex.

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RESUMO

Brief learning experience (classical conditioning) induces frequency-specific receptive-field (RF) plasticity in the auditory cortex, characterized as increased response to the frequency of the conditioned stimulus and decreased responses to most other frequencies, including the pretraining best frequency. This experiment asked (i) whether learning-induced RF plasticity, established in the waking state, can be expressed under general anesthesia and if so (ii) whether it exhibits long-term retention. Pure-tone-frequency RFs were obtained from adult guinea pigs under general anesthesia (sodium pentobarbital or ketamine) before and repeatedly after (1 hr-8 weeks) a 20- to 30-trial session of pairing a non-best-frequency tone with mild footshock. Conditioned-stimulus-specific RF plasticity was expressed under both types of anesthesia and included shifts of the pretraining best frequency toward or even to the frequency of the conditioned stimulus. Moreover, this RF plasticity exhibits long-term retention, being evident 1-8 weeks after training. This satisfies a criterion for the long-term storage of information in the auditory cortex.

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