Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4313346 Behavioural Brain Research 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The physical structure of the surrounding environment shapes the paths of progression, which in turn reflect the structure of the environment and the way that it shapes behavior. A regular and coherent physical structure results in paths that extend over the entire environment. In contrast, irregular structure results in traveling over a confined sector of the area. In this study, rats were tested in a dark arena in which half the area contained eight objects in a regular grid layout, and the other half contained eight objects in an irregular layout. In subsequent trials, a salient landmark was placed first within the irregular half, and then within the grid. We hypothesized that rats would favor travel in the area with regular order, but found that activity in the area with irregular object layout did not differ from activity in the area with grid layout, even when the irregular half included a salient landmark. Thus, the grid impact in one arena half extended to the other half and overshadowed the presumed impact of the salient landmark. This could be explained by mechanisms that control spatial behavior, such as grid cells and odometry. However, when objects were spaced irregularly over the entire arena, the salient landmark became dominant and the paths converged upon it, especially from objects with direct access to the salient landmark. Altogether, three environmental properties: (i) regular and predictable structure; (ii) salience of landmarks; and (iii) accessibility, hierarchically shape the paths of progression in a dark environment.

► Rats traveled equally over dark arena sectors with grid or irregular object spacing. ► Grid impact extended to the irregular layout sector, overshadowing salient object. ► Paths converged at a salient object when the grid object layout was not apparent. ► Without grid or salient object, traveling shrunk to only the vicinity of the start. ► Regular layout, salience, and access hierarchically shaped traveling in the dark.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
, , ,