• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Memory decay and susceptibility to amnesia dissociate punishment- from relief-learning
  • Contributor: Diegelmann, Sören; Preuschoff, Stephan; Appel, Mirjam; Niewalda, Thomas; Gerber, Bertram; Yarali, Ayse
  • Published: The Royal Society, 2013
  • Published in: Biology Letters, 9 (2013) 4, Seite 20121171
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2012.1171
  • ISSN: 1744-9561; 1744-957X
  • Keywords: General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ; Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Painful events shape future behaviour in two ways: stimuli associated with pain onset subsequently support learned avoidance (i.e. punishment-learning) because they signal future, upcoming pain. Stimuli associated with pain offset in turn signal relief and later on support learned approach (i.e. relief-learning). The relative strengths of such punishment- and relief-learning can be crucial for the adaptive organization of behaviour in the aftermath of painful events. Using Drosophila , we compare punishment- and relief-memories in terms of their temporal decay and sensitivity to retrograde amnesia. During the first 75 min following training, relief-memory is stable, whereas punishment-memory decays to half of the initial score. By 24 h after training, however, relief-memory is lost, whereas a third of punishment-memory scores still remain. In accordance with such rapid temporal decay from 75 min on, retrograde amnesia erases relief-memory but leaves a half of punishment-memory scores intact. These findings suggest differential mechanistic bases for punishment- and relief-memory, thus offering possibilities for separately interfering with either of them.
  • Access State: Open Access