Hippocampal lesions, contextual retrieval, and autoshaping in pigeons |
| |
Authors: | Richmond Jenny Colombo Michael |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, The Centre for Neuroscience, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. |
| |
Abstract: | Both pigeons and rats with damage to the hippocampus are slow to acquire an autoshaped response and emit fewer overall responses than control animals. Experiment 1 explored the possibility that the autoshaping deficit was due to an impairment in contextual retrieval. Pigeons were trained for 14 days on an autoshaping task in which a red stimulus was followed by reinforcement in context A, and a green stimulus was followed by reinforcement in context B. On day 15, the subjects were given a context test in which the red and green stimuli were presented simultaneously in context A and then later in context B. Both control and hippocampal animals showed context specificity, that is, they responded more to the red stimulus in context A and to the green stimulus in context B. In Experiment 2 we video-recorded the control and hippocampal animals performing the autoshaping task. Hippocampal animals tended to miss-peck the key more often than control animals. In addition, the number of missed pecks increased across days for hippocampal animals but not for control animals, suggesting that while the control animals increased their pecking accuracy, the hippocampal animals actually decreased their pecking accuracy. Our findings suggest that impairments in moving through space may underlie the hippocampal autoshaping deficit. |
| |
Keywords: | Pigeons Hippocampus Autoshaping Context |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|