Rat spatial memory: Resistance to retroactive interference at long retention intervals |
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Authors: | William W. Beatty David A. Shavalia |
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Affiliation: | 1. North Dakota State University, 58105, Fargo, North Dakota
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Abstract: | An attempt was made to disrupt memory for spatial information by interpolating a task of high similarity to the to-be-remembered task during a long retention interval. Rats were trained in an 8-arm maze in which choosing each arm without repetition was the optional strategy. A 4-h delay was imposed between the 4th and 5th choices. At various times during the retention interval, the rats ran a second identical maze located in another room. No evidence of retroactive interference was observed. In the second experiment, the rat was required to remember the interpolated spatial task during the retention test. This was accomplished by allowing the rat to make four choices in the first maze and then, after a variable period of time, four choices in the second maze. Four hours after exposure to each maze, retention was tested. Choice accuracy on the retention tests was high and equivalent on both mazes. Requiring the rat to remember which arms it had visited in a second maze did not impair memory for the first maze. These results demonstrate that rats can segregate spatial memories established in different contexts with considerable proficiency. |
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