Video recording system for the measurement of eyelid movements during classical conditioning of the eyeblink response in the rabbit

Classical conditioning of the eyeblink response in the rabbit is a popular model for studying the neural substrates of associative learning. Most of the common eyeblink recording techniques require invasive procedures. To perform experiments in intact animals, a non-invasive, high-speed video recording system was developed to measure eyeblink responses of rabbits during classical conditioning experiments. Besides being non-invasive, this method does not require excessive restraint of the animal. The PC-based system combines a Pulnix video camera with National Instruments video capture and timing hardware to control the experiment and acquire images of the peri-ocular region. The software developed for controlling these experiments also detects the eyeblink by measuring the movement of the upper and lower eyelids, the area of the exposed surface of the eye, and head movements in the sagittal plane. The time resolution of this relatively inexpensive system is 8.33 ms, and at a working distance of 0.8 m, it can detect movements as small as 0.11 mm.

[1]  Richard E Thompson,et al.  Cerebellar circuits and synaptic mechanisms involved in classical eyeblink conditioning , 1997, Trends in Neurosciences.

[2]  J. Bloedel,et al.  Intermediate cerebellum and conditioned eyeblinks , 2000, Experimental Brain Research.

[3]  John F. Disterhoft,et al.  A system for quantitative analysis of associative learning. Part 1. Hardware interfaces with cross-species applications , 1994, Journal of Neuroscience Methods.

[4]  J. Bloedel,et al.  The temporary inactivation of the red nucleus affects performance of both conditioned and unconditioned nictitating membrane responses in the rabbit , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.

[5]  J. B. Sidowski,et al.  Experimental methods and instrumentation in psychology , 1966 .

[6]  M. Mauk,et al.  Mechanisms of cerebellar learning suggested by eyelid conditioning , 2000, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.

[7]  M. Mauk,et al.  Cerebellar Cortex Lesions Prevent Acquisition of Conditioned Eyelid Responses , 1999, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[8]  B G Schreurs,et al.  Kinetic and frequency-domain properties of reflex and conditioned eyelid responses in the rabbit. , 2000, Journal of neurophysiology.

[9]  M. Mauk,et al.  Extinction of conditioned eyelid responses requires the anterior lobe of cerebellar cortex , 1995, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[10]  D. H. Vandercar,et al.  Nictitating membrane and corneo-retinal transducers for conditioning in rabbits. , 1969, The American psychologist.

[11]  P. Kolodziejski,et al.  Application of infrared detection in the recording of eyelid movements in rabbits. , 2001, Acta neurobiologiae experimentalis.

[12]  S. Wise,et al.  The Acquisition of Motor Behavior in Vertebrates , 1996 .

[13]  James R. Bloedel,et al.  Microinjections of anisomycin into the intermediate cerebellum during learning affect the acquisition of classically conditioned responses in the rabbit , 1998, Brain Research.