Prior exposure to drugs of abuse has been shown to occlude the structural plasticity associated with living in a complex environment. Amphetamine treatment may also occlude some cognitive advantages normally associated with living in a complex environment. To test this hypothesis we examined the influence of prior exposure to amphetamine on fear conditioning in rats housed in either a standard or complex environment. Housing in a complex environment facilitated fear learning to an auditory conditioned stimulus (CS), but not to the training context, relative to animals housed singly or in a social group. Prior treatment with amphetamine eliminated this effect. These results indicate that living in a complex environment facilitates conditional freezing to an auditory CS, and that this effect is abolished by pretreatment with amphetamine.Housing in a relatively complex environment ("environmental enrichment") is known to alter the structure of dendrites (i.e., induce structural plasticity) in a variety of brain regions, and to also influence subsequent learning and memory. The first evidence for structural changes in the brain as a result of living in a complex environment was provided by Rosenzweig and colleagues in the 1960s, who reported that animals living in a complex environment showed increased cortical weight compared with animals in standard laboratory cages (Rosenzweig et al. 1962). Since that time, there have been many studies documenting a number of brain changes in rats living in a complex environment, including increases in cerebral volume, dendritic spine density and number, long-term potentiation (LTP), resistance to neural insult, and synaptic connectivity Greenough et al. 1985Greenough et al. , 1986Green and Greenough 1986; Kolb and Gibb 1991). Although these changes have been found in the cerebral cortex and other brain regions, the focus in many of these studies has been on the hippocampus. In addition to modifying hippocampal morphology, complex housing also enhances performance on a number of hippocampal-dependent learning tasks. The most welldocumented augmentation of learning after complex housing is in spatial tasks such as the Morris water maze and Hebb-Williams maze (Pham et al. 1999;Kobayashi et al. 2002). However, there is also evidence that environmental enrichment enhances Pavlovian fear conditioning in mice (Rampon et al. 2000;Duffy et al. 2001;Tang et al. 2001).Although these examples of experience-dependent plasticity are clearly advantageous, this is not true of all forms of experience-dependent plasticity. Repeated treatment with psychostimulant drugs, for example, also leads to an increase in dendritic branching and spine density in a number of brain regions, which is thought to be related to the development of behavioral sensitization (Robinson and Kolb 1997, 1999Robinson et al. 2001; Li et al. 2004). However, treatment with amphetamine or cocaine has also been shown to occlude the ability of subsequent exposure to a complex environment to alter dendritic structure (Kolb et al....