Abstract
Stimuli that predict the occurrence of aversive events come to elicit conditioned analgesia. Experiments 1A and 1B examined the possibility that conditioning can inhibit analgesia when stimuli are paired in a backward fashion with a shock US (Pavlovian CS- s). Analgesia conditioned in response to shock context exposure was reversed during the CS- (light) presentation after four sessions. The ability of the CS- to function as a conditioned inhibitor of analgesia was then evaluated in both summation (Experiment 1A) and retardation-of-acquisition testing (Experiments 1A and 1B). The results support the conclusion that a stimulus presented after shock in a backward fashion comes to be a conditioned inhibitor of analgesia. Experiments 2A and 2B examined the assumption that the results obtained with our pain sensitivity measure (tailflicking in response to radiant heat) reflect changes in responsiveness to painful input, rather than a general motor inhibition or general insensitivity to sensory input. In Experiment 2A, tailflick responding to painful and nonpainful input was compared in animals receiving either morphine or saline. In Experiment 2B, tailflick responding to painful and nonpainful input to the tail was compared in both the shock and a neutral context. In both experiments, only the painful input yielded changes in responsivity. The results support the conclusion that the alterations in pain sensitivity produced by the CS- for shock represents a conditioned inhibition specific to pain.
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Preparation of this article was supported in part by NSF Grant BN 88-09527 and NIMH Training Grant 5T32MH14617-15 to S.M. We gratefully acknowledge Laura Subel and Kelli Mooney-Heiberger’s help in collecting data, as well as the assistance of the members of the Maier and Watkins laboratories, especially Ken Short, for comments on an earlier draft.
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Wiertelak, E.P., Watkins, L.R. & Maier, S.F. Conditioned inhibition of analgesia. Animal Learning & Behavior 20, 339–349 (1992). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197957
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03197957