Title | Operant conditioning of primate H-reflex: phases of development. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 1994 |
Authors | Wolpaw, J, Maniccia, DM, Elia, T |
Journal | Neuroscience letters |
Volume | 170 |
Pagination | 203–207 |
Date Published | 04/1994 |
ISSN | 0304-3940 |
Keywords | Time Factors |
Abstract | This study sought to determine whether operantly conditioned change in the primate triceps surae (TS) H-reflex develops in distinct phases. Data from 20 animals in which the TS H-reflex in one leg was trained up (i.e., HRup mode) and 18 in which it was trained down (i.e., HRdown mode) were averaged to define H-reflex behavior in trained and control legs. In HRup animals, the trained-leg H-reflex showed a large phase I increase in the first two days followed by gradual phase II increase that continued for weeks. The control-leg H-reflex appeared to show much smaller phase I and phase II increases. In HRdown animals, the trained-leg H-reflex decreased gradually over weeks, while the control-leg H-reflex appeared to increase within 2 days and did not change from then on. The initial rapid increase in the HRdown control leg suggested that two early events occurred in the HRdown trained leg: a nonspecific increase like that in the control leg and an operantly conditioned mode-specific decrease. These two effects may have obscured each other, so that H-reflex size in the HRdown trained leg did not drop rapidly in the first few days. These results improve understanding of adaptive H-reflex change as an operantly conditioned phenomenon, and provide encouragement and direction for efforts to reproduce and study the phenomenon in reduced or anesthetized preparations. |
URL | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8058188 |