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Amnesic effects of bilateral lesions placed in the hyperstriatum ventrale of the chick after imprinting
Authors:Dr. B. J. McCabe  J. Cipolla-Neto  G. Horn  P. Bateson
Affiliation:(1) Dept. of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, CB2 3EJ Cambridge, England;(2) Present address: Laboratorio de Neurofisiología, Departamento de Fisiología, Instituto de Ciencias Biomedicas, Universidade de São Paulo, CX Postal 4365, 01000 São Paulo, SP, Brasil
Abstract:Summary The purpose of this study was to investigate whether bilateral lesions to a part of the hyperstriatum ventrale (IMHV) impair retention if they are placed after chicks have been imprinted. Domestic chicks were hatched and reared in darkness and exposed to an imprinting (training) stimulus for 2 h commencing sime 22 h post hatch. The chicks were then anaesthetised and bilateral lesions placed in IMHV (N = 16) birds, hyperstriatum accessorium (HA; N = 16) or the lateral part of the cerebral hemispheres (LCA; N = 16). Forty-eight sham-operated chicks served as controls. Chicks were returned to the dark incubator, and, 15–20 h after the operation, their approach towards the training stimulus and to a second novel stimulus was measured. The controls and the chicks with lesions in HA and LCA showed a strong preference for the training stimulus and hence a high level of retention. The preferences of these three experimental groups did not differ significantly from one another. The mean preference of chicks with lesions in IMHV was significantly less than that of the sham-operated controls (P<0.01) and of chicks lesioned in HA (P<0.05). Bilateral lesions to IMHV therefore selectively impair retention of a preference acquired through imprinting. This impairment is unlikely to be a non-specific consequence of defective sensory processing or motor performance because the four groups did not differ from each other in (i) the time taken accurately to peck a rocking bead, (ii) the accuracy of pecking millet seeds and (iii) the performance of a simultaneous visual discrimination task involving heat reinforcement.Supported by grants from the Science Research Council, the Leverhulme Trust, the Wellcome Trust and FAPESP (Brazil)
Keywords:Chick  Imprinting  Hyperstriatum ventrale  Lesions  Learning  Memory
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