Recent authors have stressed the role of conditioning in the control of breathing, but experimental evidence of this role is still sparse and contradictory. To establish that classic conditioning of the ventilatory responses can occur in rats, we performed a controlled experiment in which a 1-min tone [conditioned stimulus (CS)] was paired with a hypercapnic stimulus [8.5% CO2, unconditioned stimulus (US)]. The experimental group (n = 9) received five paired CS-US presentations, followed by one CS alone to test conditioning. This sequence was repeated six times. The control group (n = 7) received the same number of CS and US, but each US was delivered 3 min after the CS. We observed that after the CS alone, breath duration was significantly longer in the experimental than in the control group and mean ventilation was significantly lower, thus showing inhibitory conditioning. This conditioning may have resulted from the association between the CS and the inhibitory and aversive effects of CO2. The present results confirmed the high sensitivity of the respiratory controller to conditioning processes.
Publication
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Année de publication : 1997
Type :
Article de journal
Article de journal
Auteurs :
Nsegbe, E.
Vardon, G.
Perruchet, P.
Gallego, J.
Nsegbe, E.
Vardon, G.
Perruchet, P.
Gallego, J.
Titre du journal :
Journal of Applied Physiology
Journal of Applied Physiology
Numéro du journal :
4
4
Volume du journal :
83
83