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The effects of combined perirhinal and postrhinal damage on complex discrimination tasks
Author(s) -
Gastelum Emily D.,
Guilhardi Paulo,
Burwell Rebecca D.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
hippocampus
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.767
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1098-1063
pISSN - 1050-9631
DOI - 10.1002/hipo.22063
Subject(s) - psychology , perirhinal cortex , neuroscience , stimulus (psychology) , cued speech , context (archaeology) , stimulus onset asynchrony , perception , audiology , cognition , recognition memory , cognitive psychology , medicine , biology , paleontology
Rats with combined lesions of the perirhinal (PER) and postrhinal (POR) cortices were trained on a complex discrimination in the simultaneous feature‐positive and feature‐negative discrimination task. In this task, a panel light (L) paired with an auditory stimulus determined whether a tone (T) or white noise (N) would be rewarded (+) or not rewarded (−). Thus, the light feature determined whether the target auditory stimuli were rewarded or not. In each session, trial types were LT+, T−, N+, and LN−. We had hypothesized that damage to the target regions would impair performance on this task. Acquisition was altered in the lesioned rats, but not in the predicted direction. Instead, lesioned rats exhibited significantly enhanced acquisition of the discrimination. Manipulation of intertrial intervals indicated that reduction of proactive interference did not explain the enhancement. Lesioned rats were not different from controls on a multiple‐cued interval timing task, providing evidence that the enhancement does not extend to all types of discriminations and is not due to a deficit in timing. Other research shows that rats with PER lesions are impaired on similar tasks, thus the enhancement is likely due to the effects of POR damage. Normally in this task, context is thought to accrue inhibitory control over other cues. Without this inhibitory control, animals might be expected to learn the task more efficiently. Our conclusion is that deficits in processing contextual information underlie the enhanced acquisition observed in rats with combined PER and POR damage on this complex discrimination task. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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