A decrease in intensity and duration of short-latency reaction components of the sensorimotor and visual cortical neurons to specific stimuli (pain reinforcement and light flashes, respectively) was observed after the administration of NO-generating sodium nitrite (11 mg/kg, subcutaneously). Activation decrease in the visual cortex took place irrespective of biological significance of the light flashes, i.e., in case when this stimulus was a signal of defensive conditioning and in case when these flashes were applied with continuous light (a conditioned inhibitor). Sodium nitrite almost did not change the late activation of sensorimotor and visual neurons in response to pain reinforcement and disinhibitory action of the latter. The results confirm the viewpoint about different neurotransmitters in "specifically modal" and "non-specific" pathways to the neocortex during learning.