Literature DB >> 8044689

Spatial working memory score of humans in a large radial maze, similar to published score of rats, implies capacity close to the magical number 7 +/- 22.

R B Glassman1, K J Garvey, K M Elkins, K L Kasal, N L Couillard.   

Abstract

To compare the working memory (WM) capacity of humans to rats, we tested humans with a 17-arm radial maze and, in a follow up experiment, with a 13-arm radial maze. Both mazes were 15.2 meters in diameter, painted on a grassy field. In one version of the 13-arm experiment, we required a concurrent nonsense vocalization to impede subjects' use of language to remember locations. Subjects were instructed to choose arms of the radial maze unsystematically--as rats generally appear to do--and to visit the end of each arm only once. In additional procedures, we tested working memory capacity in a verbal task that is more analogous to the radial maze than is the typical ordered recall test. Subjects were asked to try to recite a sequence of 17 numbers (i.e., 18 through 34) or letters (A through Q) in unsystematic order, with no repeats. In another experiment subjects recited 13 numbers (14-26) or letters (A-M). In all tests, subjects were allowed only as many responses as there were distinct items (17 or 13, respectively). Average correct-response (nonrepeat) scores were 14.4 for the 17-arm maze and 14.1 for both of the verbal 17-item tests; these scores are close to the reported score for rats in a 17-arm radial maze. Average scores were between 10.8 and 11.4 in all of the 13-item maze and recitation tasks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8044689     DOI: 10.1016/0361-9230(94)90012-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res Bull        ISSN: 0361-9230            Impact factor:   4.077


  5 in total

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Review 4.  Application of Real and Virtual Radial Arm Maze Task in Human.

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5.  Navigating to new frontiers in behavioral neuroscience: traditional neuropsychological tests predict human performance on a rodent-inspired radial-arm maze.

Authors:  Sarah E Mennenga; Leslie C Baxter; Itamar S Grunfeld; Gene A Brewer; Leona S Aiken; Elizabeth B Engler-Chiurazzi; Bryan W Camp; Jazmin I Acosta; B Blair Braden; Keley R Schaefer; Julia E Gerson; Courtney N Lavery; Candy W S Tsang; Lauren T Hewitt; Melissa L Kingston; Stephanie V Koebele; K Jakob Patten; B Hunter Ball; Michael K McBeath; Heather A Bimonte-Nelson
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  5 in total

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