Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4312532 Behavioural Brain Research 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Rats are able to solve the active place avoidance task without the room-bound cues.•Their performance without the room-bound cues is not as efficient as with them.•Pretraining with the room-bound cues is needed for learning the task without them.

The active place avoidance task is used in the research of spatial cognition. Rats are trained on a rotating arena to avoid an aversive stimulus delivered in a part of the room while being transported toward it by the arena rotation. The task tests the ability of rats to navigate with respect to distal cues in the room and to ignore confusing cues on the arena. The demand for cue segregation makes the task suitable for studying neural mechanisms responsible for cognitive coordination. An incidental observation made in our laboratory implied that overtrained rats may be able to solve the task without the room-bound cues. The aim of this study was to test this observation. The room-bound cues were hidden by switching off the lights. Rats trained only in darkness did not learn the task at all. Rats that were initially pre-trained in light performed considerably better. In a few exceptional dark sessions they even reached the level of performance observed in light. The rats needed the aversive stimuli to keep off the to-be-avoided sector. Without them, they continued their behavior, but with no spatial relationship to the to-be-avoided sector. We conclude that rats are able to solve the place avoidance task without the room-bound cues, but not as efficiently as in their presence.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
, , , , , ,