Person:
Venne, Jonathan Ryan

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Venne

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Jonathan Ryan

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Venne, Jonathan Ryan

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    Silent Trace Eliminates Differential Eyeblink Learning in Abstinent Alcoholics
    (Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI), 2009) Maksimovskiy, Arkadiy L.; Fortier, Catherine; Venne, Jonathan Ryan; Lafleche, Ginette; McGlinchey, Regina
    Chronic alcoholism has profound effects on the brain, including volume reductions in regions critical for eyeblink classical conditioning (EBCC). The current study challenged abstinent alcoholics using delay (n = 20) and trace (n = 17) discrimination/reversal EBCC. Comparisons revealed a significant difference between delay and trace conditioning performance during reversal (t (35) = 2.08, p < 0.05). The difference between the two tasks for discrimination was not significant (p = 0.44). These data support the notion that alcoholics are increasingly impaired in the complex task of reversing a previously learned discrimination when a silent trace interval is introduced. Alcoholics’ impairment in flexibly altering learned associations may be central to their continued addiction.