Literature DB >> 3964405

The effects of hippocampal lesions upon spatial and non-spatial tests of working memory.

J P Aggleton, P R Hunt, J N Rawlins.   

Abstract

A series of experiments examined the proposal that the primary effect of hippocampal damage in rats is to disrupt working memory. Although extensive hippocampal lesions produced a severe impairment in forced-choice alternation--a test of spatial working memory--the same lesions did not impair the acquisition of a non-spatial test of working memory--delayed non-matching-to-sample. This test of object recognition required the rats to select that arm in a Y-maze which contained unfamiliar stimuli. Rats with hippocampal lesions were able to learn and perform this task at normal rates, even with retention delays of as long as 60 s. Two additional experiments helped confirm that the animals had indeed learnt a non-spatial test of working memory. The final experiment examined whether hippocampal lesions resulted in an increased sensitivity to proactive interference. It was found that repetition of test stimuli within a session, which increased interference, did attenuate recognition performance but there was no evidence that the animals with hippocampal lesions were differentially affected.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3964405     DOI: 10.1016/0166-4328(86)90011-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Brain Res        ISSN: 0166-4328            Impact factor:   3.332


  96 in total

1.  Neurotoxic hippocampal lesions have no effect on odor span and little effect on odor recognition memory but produce significant impairments on spatial span, recognition, and alternation.

Authors:  P A Dudchenko; E R Wood; H Eichenbaum
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2000-04-15       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 2.  Evidence concerning how neurons of the perirhinal cortex may effect familiarity discrimination.

Authors:  M W Brown; Z I Bashir
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2002-08-29       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 3.  Nicotinic modulation of hippocampal cell signaling and associated effects on learning and memory.

Authors:  Munir Gunes Kutlu; Thomas J Gould
Journal:  Physiol Behav       Date:  2015-12-11

Review 4.  Spontaneous object recognition and its relevance to schizophrenia: a review of findings from pharmacological, genetic, lesion and developmental rodent models.

Authors:  L Lyon; L M Saksida; T J Bussey
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2011-11-10       Impact factor: 4.530

Review 5.  Chronic stress- and sex-specific neuromorphological and functional changes in limbic structures.

Authors:  Katie J McLaughlin; Sarah E Baran; Cheryl D Conrad
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2009-07-31       Impact factor: 5.590

6.  Associative properties of the perirhinal network.

Authors:  Gunes Unal; John Apergis-Schoute; Denis Paré
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2011-08-12       Impact factor: 5.357

7.  Neural correlates of the episodic encoding of pictures and words.

Authors:  C L Grady; A R McIntosh; M N Rajah; F I Craik
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1998-03-03       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 8.  Anti-dementia drugs and hippocampal-dependent memory in rodents.

Authors:  Carla M Yuede; Hongxin Dong; John G Csernansky
Journal:  Behav Pharmacol       Date:  2007-09       Impact factor: 2.293

9.  Time Cells in the Hippocampus Are Neither Dependent on Medial Entorhinal Cortex Inputs nor Necessary for Spatial Working Memory.

Authors:  Marta Sabariego; Antonia Schönwald; Brittney L Boublil; David T Zimmerman; Siavash Ahmadi; Nailea Gonzalez; Christian Leibold; Robert E Clark; Jill K Leutgeb; Stefan Leutgeb
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2019-05-02       Impact factor: 17.173

10.  The N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor modulator GLYX-13 enhances learning and memory, in young adult and learning impaired aging rats.

Authors:  Jeffrey Burgdorf; Xiao-lei Zhang; Craig Weiss; Elizabeth Matthews; John F Disterhoft; Patric K Stanton; Joseph R Moskal
Journal:  Neurobiol Aging       Date:  2009-05-14       Impact factor: 4.673

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