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Effects of rodent prefrontal lesions on object-based, visual scene memory
Authors:William E. DeCoteau   Daniel McElvaine   Linnea Smolentzov  Raymond P. Kesner  
Affiliation:aDepartment of Psychology, St. Lawrence University, Canton, NY 13617, United States;bDepartment of Psychology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, United States
Abstract:It has been suggested that certain prefrontal areas contribute to a neural circuit that mediates visual object memory. Using a successive go/no-go visual scene discrimination task, object-based long-term memory was assessed in two rodent prefrontal regions. Rewarded trials consisted of a standard scene of four toy objects placed over baited food wells. The objects and their locations composing the standard scene remained constant for the duration of the study. Trials in which one of the standard scene objects was replaced with a novel object were not rewarded. Following the establishment of a significant difference between latency to approach the rewarded standard scene compared to latency to approach non-rewarded scenes, quinolinic acid or control vehicle was infused into either the prelimbic and infralimbic cortices or the anterior cingulate cortex. Following a 1 week recovery period, subjects were retested. Animals with prelimbic/infralimbic cortex lesions displayed a profound and sustained deficit, whereas, animals with anterior cingulate cortex lesions showed a slight initial impairment but eventually recovered. Both lesion groups acquired a simple single object discrimination task as quickly as controls indicating that the deficits on the original scene discrimination task were not due to motivational, response inhibition, or perceptual problems.
Keywords:Anterior cingulate cortex   Prelimbic   Infralimbic cortices   Visual scene memory
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