| Literature DB >> 28634446 |
Marie Hébert1,2, Jan Bulla3, Denis Vivien1,4, Véronique Agin1.
Abstract
Animals use distal and proximal visual cues to accurately navigate in their environment, with the possibility of the occurrence of associative mechanisms such as cue competition as previously reported in honey-bees, rats, birds and humans. In this pilot study, we investigated one of the most common forms of cue competition, namely the overshadowing effect, between visual landmarks during spatial learning in mice. To this end, C57BL/6J × Sv129 mice were given a two-trial place recognition task in a T-maze, based on a novelty free-choice exploration paradigm previously developed to study spatial memory in rodents. As this procedure implies the use of different aspects of the environment to navigate (i.e., mice can perceive from each arm of the maze), we manipulated the distal and proximal visual landmarks during both the acquisition and retrieval phases. Our prospective findings provide a first set of clues in favor of the occurrence of an overshadowing between visual cues during a spatial learning task in mice when both types of cues are of the same modality but at varying distances from the goal. In addition, the observed overshadowing seems to be non-reciprocal, as distal visual cues tend to overshadow the proximal ones when competition occurs, but not vice versa. The results of the present study offer a first insight about the occurrence of associative mechanisms during spatial learning in mice, and may open the way to promising new investigations in this area of research. Furthermore, the methodology used in this study brings a new, useful and easy-to-use tool for the investigation of perceptive, cognitive and/or attentional deficits in rodents.Entities:
Keywords: associative learning; landmark processing; mice; overshadowing; spatial learning
Year: 2017 PMID: 28634446 PMCID: PMC5459897 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Schematic representation of the behavioral tasks. During the acquisition phase, one arm of the T-maze was randomly closed with a guillotine door. Each mouse was placed a first time in the starting arm (Arm 1) and allowed to visit the two accessible arms (Arm 1 and Arm 2) for 5 min. Mice were then returned to their home cage for h, before being subjected to the retrieval phase, in which they had free access to each of the three arms for 5 min. Experiments 1 and 2 were designed to investigate spatial performance with proximal or distal visual cues alone, respectively. Experiments 3 and 4 were designed to investigate the existence of an overshadowing of one type of visual cues by the other (Experiment 3: proximal cues removal for the retrieval phase; Experiment 4: distal cues removal for the retrieval phase). Exp.: Experiment; I.T.I.: Intertrial Interval.
Figure 2Spatial performance in the T-maze. (A,B) Spatial performance when proximal (Experiment 1; A), or distal (Experiment 2; B), visual cues were available during both the acquisition and the retrieval phases. (C,D) Spatial performance when both proximal and distal visual cues were available during the acquisition phase, but one type was removed for the retrieval phase (Experiment 4, C: distal cues removal; Experiment 3, D: proximal cues removal). Spatial performance was assessed through the comparison of the number of visits in each of the three arms during the retrieval phase. Friedman tests: P < 0.01 for all tests. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests: *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; NS: P > 0.05. NExperiment 1 = 15; NExperiment 2 = 15; NExperiment 3 = 16; NExperiment 4 = 15. Boxplots show distributions with black horizontal lines indicating the median, box margins denoting the lower and upper quartiles, and the whiskers extending from the box out to the most extreme observation within 1.5 times the interquartile range from the box.