Abstract
Rats were given a single footshock while licking a H2O tube and tested 24 h later for retention of the footshock experience. A single bilateral injection of a subseizure dose of physostigmine into the amygdala applied immediately, but not 18 h, after the footshock impaired retention. This effect appeared to be somewhat localized, as physostigmine injected into the hippocampus or lateral ventricles did not disrupt retention. A subseizure dose of atropine sulfate into the amygdala, given immediately or 18 h after the footshock did not impair retention. Atropine injected concurrently with physostigmine into the same amygdaloid loci counteracted a potential physostigmine-induced retention deficit. Injection of carbachol into the amygdala also impaired retention. Carbachol precipitated seizures and possibly exerted proactive consequences on performance. The time-dependent nature of te deficit following physostigmine was consistent with the view that injection of cholinergic agonists into the amygdala disrupts memory for the footshock experience.