The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
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The defensive withdrawal reflex of the mantle organs of Aplysia californica has 2 major components, siphon withdrawal and gill withdrawal. In the previous paper of this series (Rankin and Carew, 1987), the development of 2 forms of nonassociative learning, habituation and dishabituation, was examined in the siphon withdrawal component of the reflex. In the present study we examined these same forms of learning in the gill withdrawal component of the reflex. ⋯ Stimulation parameters were matched to produce behavioral responses comparable with those in the intact animal. In an isolated CNS preparation the same nerve stimuli were used as in the semi-intact preparation, but the response measure used was the evoked neural discharge recorded in an efferent nerve innervating the gill. Both preparations exhibited response decrement and facilitation that was quantitatively as well as qualitatively similar to that observed in intact animals, indicating that 2 simple forms of learning exhibited by the gill withdrawal reflex in juvenile Aplysia can be localized to neural circuits within the abdominal ganglion.