Associative conditioning of single sensory neurons suggests a cellular mechanism for learning
- PMID: 6294834
- DOI: 10.1126/science.6294834
Associative conditioning of single sensory neurons suggests a cellular mechanism for learning
Abstract
A cellular analog of associative learning has been demonstrated in individual sensory neurons of the tail withdrawal reflex of Aplysia. Sensory cells activated by intracellular current injection shortly before a sensitizing shock to the animal's tail display significantly more facilitation of their monosynaptic connections to a tail motor neuron than cells trained either with intracellular stimulation unpaired to tail shock or with tail shock alone. This associative effect is acquired rapidly and is expressed as a temporally specific amplification of heterosynaptic facilitation. The results suggest that activity-dependent neuromodulation may be a mechanism underlying associative information storage and point to aspects of subcellular processes that might be involved in the formation of neural associations.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
