Different types of avoidance behavior in rats produce dissociable post-training changes in sleep |
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Authors: | Fogel Stuart M Smith Carlyle T Higginson Caitlin D Beninger Richard J |
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Affiliation: | a Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada, K7L 3N6b Department of Psychology, Trent University, Peterborough, ON, Canada, K9J 7B8c Department of Psychology, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada, K7L 3N6d Department of Psychiatry, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON, Canada, K7L 3N6 |
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Abstract: | Avoidance learning affects post-training sleep, and post-training sleep deprivation impairs performance. However, not all rats learn to make avoidance responses, and some rats fail to escape; a definitive behavior of learned helplessness, a model of depression. This study investigated the changes in sleep associated with different behaviors adopted following avoidance training. Rats (n = 53) were trained for 100 trials over 2 days (50 trials/day), followed by 23-24 h of post-training polysomnography, then re-tested (25 trials). At re-test, rats were categorized into: 1) Active Avoiders (AA; n = 22), 2), Non-learning (NL; n = 21), or 3) Escape Failures (EF; n = 10). AA rats increased avoidances over days, whereas the NL and EF groups did not. EF rats increased escape failures over days, whereas the NL and AA rats did not. EF rats had increased rapid eye movement (REM) sleep in the first 4 h on training day 1. They also had increased non-REM sleep in the first 4 h and last 4 h on both training days. AA rats had increased REM sleep 13-20 h post-training. The type of behavioral strategy adopted throughout training is associated with a unique pattern of changes in post-training sleep. Training-dependent changes in post-acquisition sleep may reflect distinct processes involved in the consolidation of these different memory traces. |
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Keywords: | Sleep REM sleep Non-REM sleep Memory Avoidance learning Learned helplessness Rats |
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