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Stainless steel drop pans

Manufactured by Med Associates

Stainless steel drop pans are sturdy, corrosion-resistant containers designed to catch and contain spills or overflow during various laboratory procedures. They are made from high-quality stainless steel for durability and easy cleaning.

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Lab products found in correlation

2 protocols using stainless steel drop pans

1

Fear Conditioning Experimental Setup

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The basic system was as previously described.36 (link)–39 (link) Briefly, fear conditioning experiments were conducted in a 27 × 27 × 11 cm chamber with clear acrylic backs and doors, aluminum sides, stainless steel rod floors (rods were spaced 1/8 inches apart), stainless steel drop pans (Med Associates), and overhead lights set at 4 lx. Footshocks were administered through the rods via solid state shock scramblers and electronic constant current shock sources controlled by Actimetrics Freezeframe version 4 software (Wilmette, Illinois) run on a desktop PC. Actimetrics Freezeframe version 4 software was also used to record behavior using individual cameras mounted above each chamber. Chamber details were altered to create different experimental contexts in some experiments (as indicated in figure legends).
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2

Fear Conditioning Protocol for Mice

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Fear-conditioning experiments were conducted as previously described (Temme et al., 2014 (link)). Fear-conditioning chambers were composed of clear acrylic backs and doors, aluminum sides, stainless steel grid floors with one-eighth inch spaces, and stainless steel drop pans (Med Associates). Throughout experimentation, chambers and floor pans were cleaned with 70% ethanol. Chambers were illuminated using room lights set at 150 W. Footshocks were administered through the grid via solid-state shock scramblers and electronic constant-current shock sources. Shocks were controlled by a desktop PC running Actimetrics FreezeFrame software. The behavior of each mouse was recorded and digitized using individual cameras mounted above each chamber using the Actimetrics FreezeFrame software. Mice were fear conditioned to a context using one training session per day for 2 d. Each fear-conditioning session consisted of 3 min of context exposure to the training chamber followed by three unsignaled footshocks (0.5 mA, 2 s) with 30 s between footshocks. Mice were removed from the training chamber 30 s after the last footshock. Twenty-four hours after the last training session, mice were tested for fear of the trained context using 5 min of context exposure.
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