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Delayed-nonmatching-to-sample performance is impaired by extensive, but not by limited, lesions of the thalamus in the rat.
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Citations
37
References
1992
Year
Neural MechanismNeurodynamicsBehavioral NeuroscienceNeuroanatomyNeurophysiologyDelayed-nonmatching-to-sample PerformanceMedicineBrain MechanismLimited AreasDnmts PerformanceRadio-frequency LesionsSurgeryNeurologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemNervous SystemCognitive NeuroscienceSocial Sciences
Two experiments were conducted to determine whether lesions affecting limited areas of the thalamus can impair the performance of rats on a spatial delayed-nonmatching-to-sample (DNMTS) task trained before surgery. In Experiment 1, DNMTS was not affected by lesions produced by injecting 5 microliters of 1 mM N-methyl-D-aspartate into either the midline thalamus (n = 16) or bilaterally 1.0 mm from the midline (n = 16). In experiment 2, radio-frequency lesions were made 1.0 mm lateral to the midline at 3 anterior-posterior locations that destroyed the full rostral-caudal extent of the lateral internal medullary lamina (L-IML; n = 8), or at single anterior-posterior locations that destroyed either the anterior (n = 8) or posterior (n = 8) portions of the L-IML site. Although complete L-IML lesions disrupted DNMTS performance to an extent comparable to that of another study (Mair & Lacourse, 1992), lesions that were restricted to either the anterior or posterior portion of the L-IML site had no significant effect on this task.
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