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The effects of cholinergic drugs upon recognition memory in rats
Authors:A. E. Huston   J. P. Aggleton
Affiliation: a Department of Psychology, Durham University, Durham, U.K.
Abstract:
This study measured the effects of the muscarinic blocker, scopolamine, upon object recognition. In order to test object recognition, rats were trained to choose between two distinctive goal boxes, one of which was familiar, and the other was novel. Selection of the unfamiliar goal box was always rewarded (nonmatching-to-sample), and new pairs of start/goal boxes were used on every trial.

In the first experiment it was found that injections of 0.05 mg/kg scopolamine hydrochloride and above produced significant impairments on this nonspatial test of working memory. A second experiment examined whether scopolamine caused a loss of retention by comparing the effects of the drug when the interval between stimulus presentation and choice test was increased from just over 0 sec to 60 sec. While the highest dose of scopolamine hydrobromide (0.06 mg/kg) was sufficient to produce a significant impairment on the longer retention interval, there was no evidence that this dose produced faster forgetting of the stimuli. This result suggests that the drug caused a general depression in performance, which may or may not reflect amnesic properties. In contrast, simultaneous tests with the anticholinesterase, physostigmine, indicated that increasing available acetyl choline might attenuate the effects of the retention intervals. A final series of control tests revealed that the rats relied on cues from a variety of sensory modalities in order to perform the nonmatching task.
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