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Title: Effects of striatal or accumbens lesions on the amphetamine-induced abolition of latent inhibition. Author: Konstandi M, Kafetzopoulos E. Journal: Pharmacol Biochem Behav; 1993 Apr; 44(4):751-4. PubMed ID: 8469686. Abstract: In this study, we tested the effects of nucleus accumbens or corpus striatum lesions on the abolition of latent inhibition induced by d-amphetamine. In the latent inhibition paradigm, animals learn to ignore a repeatedly presented nonreinforced stimulus. In this paradigm, the repeated nonreinforced preexposure to a stimulus retards subsequent conditioning to that stimulus. Pharmacological manipulations that enhance the dopaminergic function (e.g., d-amphetamine) abolish this ability to ignore an irrelevant stimulus. Previous studies have revealed a major role of the nucleus accumbens in the d-amphetamine-induced abolition of latent inhibition because intraacumbens injections of the drug mimic its systemic effects. The results of this study, however, revealed a significant increase in the disruption of latent inhibition by d-amphetamine between corpus striatum-lesioned and sham-operated rats, but a marginal difference between nucleus accumbens lesioned and sham-operated rats, which had been preexposed to the stimulus. These findings indicate that the corpus striatum plays also a major role in the disruption of latent inhibition by d-amphetamine. It seems, therefore, that the nucleus accumbens and corpus striatum may represent a functionally common system regarding the expression of latent inhibition, although different experimental manipulation can favor the one structure over the other, reflecting probably their complex function.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]