Operant conditioning of the primate H-reflex: factors affecting the magnitude of change.

TitleOperant conditioning of the primate H-reflex: factors affecting the magnitude of change.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1993
AuthorsWolpaw, J, Herchenroder, PA, Carp, JS
JournalExperimental brain research. Experimentelle Hirnforschung. Expérimentation cérébrale
Volume97
Pagination31–39
Date Published12/1993
ISSN0014-4819
KeywordsH-Reflex, monkey, operant conditioning, plasticity, Spinal Cord
Abstract

Primates can gradually increase or decrease H-reflex amplitude in one leg when reward depends on that amplitude. The magnitude of change varies greatly from animal to animal. This study sought to define the factors that control this magnitude. It evaluated the influence of animal age, muscle size (absolute and relative), background electromyographic activity (EMG) level, M response amplitude, initial H-reflex amplitude, performance intensity, and behavior of the contralateral leg. Fifty-four animals (Macaca nemestrina) underwent operant conditioning of the triceps surae H-reflex in one leg (the trained leg). Twenty-eight were rewarded for larger H-reflexes (HRup animals), and 26 were rewarded for smaller H-reflexes (HRdown animals). In the HRup animals, H-reflex amplitude in the trained leg rose to an average final value of 177% of its initial amplitude. Magnitude of increase varied widely across animals. Nine animals rose to 120-140%, 11 to 160-240%, three to 300% or more, and five remained within 20% of initial amplitude. In the HRdown animals, H-reflex amplitude in the trained leg decreased to an average of 69% of initial amplitude. Magnitude of decrease varied widely. Five animals decreased to 20-40%, seven to 40-60%, six to 60-80%, and eight remained within 20% of initial amplitude. Animal age, as assessed by weight, markedly affected HRdown conditioning, but not HRup conditioning. Heavy HRdown animals (> or = 6 kg) were more successful than light HRdown animals (

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8131830
DOI10.1007/BF00228815

You are here