کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
6257894 | 1612962 | 2014 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

- Animated images serving as reward were presented for 1-min intervals.
- Stimulus presentation intervals were separated by inter-stimulus intervals (ISI).
- Zebrafish preferred the prior stimulus location even during the longest ISI (16Â min).
- Zebrafish showed no performance improvement across repeated stimulus/ISI periods.
- The paradigm is an automated method to test short term memory in zebrafish.
Learning and memory represent perhaps the most complex behavioral phenomena. Although their underlying mechanisms have been extensively analyzed, only a fraction of the potential molecular components have been identified. The zebrafish has been proposed as a screening tool with which mechanisms of complex brain functions may be systematically uncovered. However, as a relative newcomer in behavioral neuroscience, the zebrafish has not been well characterized for its cognitive and mnemonic features, thus learning and/or memory screens with adults have not been feasible. Here we study short-term memory of adult zebrafish. We show animated images of conspecifics (the stimulus) to the experimental subject during 1Â min intervals on ten occasions separated by different (2, 4, 8 or 16Â min long) inter-stimulus intervals (ISI), a between subject experimental design. We quantify the distance of the subject from the image presentation screen during each stimulus presentation interval, during each of the 1-min post-stimulus intervals immediately following the stimulus presentations and during each of the 1-min intervals furthest away from the last stimulus presentation interval and just before the next interval (pre-stimulus interval), respectively. Our results demonstrate significant retention of short-term memory even in the longest ISI group but suggest no acquisition of reference memory. Because in the employed paradigm both stimulus presentation and behavioral response quantification is computer automated, we argue that high-throughput screening for drugs or mutations that alter short-term memory performance of adult zebrafish is now becoming feasible.
Journal: Behavioural Brain Research - Volume 270, 15 August 2014, Pages 29-36