| Literature DB >> 26525073 |
Dominic M D Tran1, R Frederick Westbrook2.
Abstract
A diet rich in fats and sugars is associated with cognitive deficits in people, and rodent models have shown that such a diet produces deficits on tasks assessing spatial learning and memory. Spatial navigation is guided by two distinct types of information: geometrical, such as distance and direction, and featural, such as luminance and pattern. To clarify the nature of diet-induced spatial impairments, we provided rats with standard chow supplemented with sugar water and a range of energy-rich foods eaten by people, and then we assessed their place- and object-recognition memory. Rats exposed to this diet performed comparably with control rats fed only chow on object recognition but worse on place recognition. This impairment on the place-recognition task was present after only a few days on the diet and persisted across tests. Critically, this spatial impairment was specific to the processing of distance and direction.Entities:
Keywords: diet; geometric processing; object-recognition memory; spatial memory
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26525073 DOI: 10.1177/0956797615608240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976