| Literature DB >> 24137115 |
Almuth Spröwitz1, Jörg Bock, Katharina Braun.
Abstract
In humans and animals cognitive training during childhood plays an important role in shaping neural circuits and thereby determines learning capacity later in life. Using a negative feedback learning paradigm, the two-way active avoidance (TWA) learning, we aimed to investigate in mice (i) the age-dependency of TWA learning, (ii) the consequences of pretraining in childhood on adult learning capacity and (iii) the impact of sex on the learning paradigm in mice. Taken together, we show here for the first time that the beneficial or detrimental outcome of pretraining in childhood depends on the age during which TWA training is encountered, indicating that different, age-dependent long-term "memory traces" might be formed, which are recruited during adult TWA training and thereby either facilitate or impair adult TWA learning. While pretraining during infancy results in learning impairment in adulthood, pretraining in late adolescence improved avoidance learning. The experiments revealed a clear sex difference in the group of late-adolescent mice: female mice showed better avoidance learning during late adolescence compared to males, and the beneficial impact of late-adolescent pretraining on adult learning was more pronounced in females compared to males.Entities:
Keywords: active avoidance learning; feedback learning; infant learning; ontogeny of learning; sex differences
Year: 2013 PMID: 24137115 PMCID: PMC3797392 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2013.00143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Schedule of a single trial.
Figure 2Impact of age/age at pretraining on avoidance learning. The left graphs show results for females, the right graphs for males. The left part of each graph summarizes the effect of age on the number of avoidances (A,B), escapes (C,D), and failures (E,F) and escape latencies (G,H) (mean ± s.e.m.). The letters indicate significant differences between the young age groups. The right part of each graph summarizes the effect of age at pretraining on adult active avoidance learning. The letters indicate significant differences between the pretrained groups and naive adults. a: p < 0.05 infants vs. preadolescents; b: p < 0.05 infants vs. adolescents; c: infants vs. late adolescents; d: p < 0.05 preadolescents vs. adolescents; e: p < 0.05 preadolescents vs. late adolescents; f: p < 0.05 adolescents vs. late adolescents; w: p < 0.05 pretrained as infants vs. naives; x: p < 0.05 pretrained as preadolescents vs. naives; y: p < 0.05 pretrained as adolescents vs. naives; z: p < 0.05 pretrained as late adolescents vs. naives.
Statistical results of the day-by-day analysis obtained for the main factor age during pretraining or pretraining condition during adult training for females and males.
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| Failures | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | |
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| Escapes | n.s. | n.s. | |||
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