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Volume 16, Number 16,
Issue of August 15, 1996
pp. 4923-4932
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Site Specificity of Short-Term and Long-Term Habituation in the
Tail-Elicited Siphon Withdrawal Reflex of Aplysia
Received Feb. 5, 1996; revised May 22, 1996; accepted May 24, 1996.
Mark Stopfer1,
Xinghai Chen1,
Yu-Tzu Tai1,
Gloria S. Huang1, and
Thomas J. Carew1, 2
Departments of 1 Psychology and 2 Biology,
Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8205
The study of habituation in animals with relatively simple nervous
systems has contributed significantly to the understanding of
mechanisms underlying learning and memory. Using the tail-elicited
siphon withdrawal reflex of Aplysia, which is mediated in
part by bilaterally symmetrical clusters of tail sensory neurons, we
found that both short-term and long-term habituation can be restricted
laterally, such that habituation produced by stimulation of one side of
the tail does not generalize to the other side. Further experiments in
this preparation revealed that long-term, laterally restricted
habituation is sensitive to the temporal pattern with which stimuli are
presented. We also determined that both short-term and long-term
habituation can take place in a reduced behavioral preparation, and
that short-term habituation can be restricted within relatively small
stimulation sites located on the same side of the tail. These results
provide insights into the cellular organization of habituation, and
they provide a useful preparation for a cellular analysis of this basic
form of learning.
Key words:
Aplysia;
habituation;
specificity;
long-term;
learning;
tail;
siphon
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