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Individual Hippocampal Mossy Fiber Distribution in Mice Correlates with Two-Way Avoidance Performance
99
Citations
9
References
1981
Year
Brain FunctionDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceBrain MechanismNeurotransmissionMice CorrelatesSocial SciencesCognitive NeuroscienceNeurogeneticsTwo-way Avoidance PerformanceCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceCortical RemodelingShuttle-box LearningTwo-way Avoidance TaskDependent Poor AvoidanceSynaptic PlasticityNeurobiological MechanismNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceMedicine
Mice systematically bred for randomization of their genotype show large individual differences when performing a two-way avoidance task (shuttle-box learning). Their behavioral scores correlate strongly (r = -0.80, P less than .01) with the number of mossy fibers synapsing on basal dendrites of hippocampal pyramidal neurons, poor avoiders having relatively more such terminals. This confirms previous findings showing that rat and mouse strains known for genetically dependent poor avoidance learning have extended intra- and infrapyramidal mossy fiber projections.
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