Failure to develop a conditional reflex by stimulation of the cephalad portion of the severed vagosympathetic trunk: Its significance in terms of the central connections of the vagus |
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Authors: | E. Cowles Andrus W. Horsley Gantt L. A. Plumlee K. Gross |
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Affiliation: | 1. The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 2. The Pavlovian Laboratory, VA Hospital, Perry Point, Maryland
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Abstract: | Stimulation of the central stump of either vagosympathetic trunk in the dog, the contralateral nerve remaining intact, regularly provoked deep respiratory movements with forceful expiration, followed by a period of apnea, and a fall in blood pressure, systolic and diastolic, of 20–60 mm/Hg. Stimulation of the cephalad portion of the left nerve provoked brief acceleration of heart rate during the period of hyperventilation, followed by bradycardia; when the stimulus was applied to the central stump of the right nerve heart rate remained relatively unchanged. When a 12-second tone as a conditional stimulus (CS) was reinforced during its last six seconds with such stimulation of the vagosympathetic trunk as an unconditional stimulus (US), despite the striking visceromotor responses elicited by the US, no conditional reflex was established even after more than 3,400 trials in 16 dogs (34–781 trials per animal). |
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