Publication | Closed Access
Absence of snapshot memory of the target view interferes with place navigation learning by rats in the water maze.
28
Citations
0
References
1994
Year
Snapshot MemoryCognitionAttentionSocial SciencesMemoryCognitive NeuroscienceSpatial ReasoningCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesWater MazeBehavioral NeuroscienceMorris Water MazeVision ResearchVisual PathwayVisual ProcessingPerception-action LoopVisual FunctionAssociative Memory (Psychology)Eye TrackingProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceSpatial CognitionSpatial BehaviorTracking SystemPlace Navigation Learning
Contribution of visual and nonvisual mechanisms to spatial behavior of rats in the Morris water maze was studied with a computerized infrared tracking system, which switched off the room lights when the subject entered the inner circular area of the pool with an escape platform. Naive rats trained under light-dark conditions (L-D) found the escape platform more slowly than rats trained in permanent light (L). After group members were swapped, the L-pretrained rats found under L-D conditions the same target faster and eventually approached latencies attained during L navigation. Performance of L-D-trained rats deteriorated in permanent darkness (D) but improved with continued D training. Thus L-D navigation improves gradually by procedural learning (extrapolation of the start-target azimuth into the zero-visibility zone) but remains impaired by lack of immediate visual feedback rather than by absence of the snapshot memory of the target view.