The Neuroscience of Mammalian Associative Learning
University of California, Los Angeles · University of Southern California
Abstract
Mammalian associative learning is organized into separate anatomically defined functional systems. We illustrate the organization of two of these systems, Pavlovian fear conditioning and Pavlovian eyeblink conditioning, by describing studies using mutant mice, brain stimulation and recording, brain lesions and direct pharmacological manipulations of specific brain regions. The amygdala serves as the neuroanatomical hub of the former, whereas the cerebellum is the hub of the latter. Pathways that carry information about signals for biologically important events arrive at these hubs by circuitry that depends on stimulus modality and complexity. Within the amygdala and cerebellum, neural plasticity occurs because…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.32
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 187
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Neuroscience
- Associative learning
- Psychology
- Amygdala
- Associative property
- Classical conditioning
- Biological neural network
- Eyeblink conditioning