Publication | Closed Access
One-Trial Object Recognition by Rats
164
Citations
17
References
1985
Year
Memory RetrievalEngineeringObject CategorizationOne-trial Object RecognitionCognitionSocial SciencesImage AnalysisVisual CognitionPattern RecognitionObject MatchingMemoryComparative PsychologyCognitive NeuroscienceVision RecognitionHuman LearningCognitive ScienceMachine VisionBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceVisuomotor LearningSingle TrialExperimental PsychologyGoal BoxesComputer VisionAssociative Memory (Psychology)Object RecognitionNeuroscienceDecision Neuroscience
Four experiments examined the ability of rats to solve problems analogous to those used with primates, where they were required to remember an object seen on a single trial. In the first experiment, rats were rewarded for selecting the novel of two goal boxes in a Y-maze (nonmatching). Different pairs of goal boxes were used for every trial within a session in order to increase the salience of the positive stimulus and to exclude the use of odour trails. The animals rapidly learnt this one-trial object recognition task and performed well above chance after retention intervals as long as 120 sec. A control experiment confirmed that the rats could not use spatial cues to solve the task. A third experiment showed that rats could also learn to select the familiar of two boxes in a one-trial test of object matching. In the final experiment the rats were unable to acquire a win–stay/lose–shift strategy when tested in a comparable manner.
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