The touchscreen operant platform for testing working memory and pattern separation in rats and mice
Publication year
2013Source
Nature Protocols, 8, 10, (2013), pp. 2006-21ISSN
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Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal title
Nature Protocols
Volume
vol. 8
Issue
iss. 10
Page start
p. 2006
Page end
p. 21
Subject
DCN PAC - Perception action and controlAbstract
The automated touchscreen operant chamber for rats and mice allows for the assessment of multiple cognitive domains within the same testing environment. This protocol presents the location discrimination (LD) task and the trial-unique delayed nonmatching-to-location (TUNL) task, which both assess memory for location. During these tasks, animals are trained to a predefined criterion during approximately 20-40 daily sessions. In LD sessions, touching the same location on the screen is rewarded on consecutive trials, followed by a reversal of location-reward contingencies. TUNL, a working memory task, requires animals to 'nonmatch' to a sample location after a delay. In both the LD and TUNL tasks, spatial similarity can be varied, allowing assessment of pattern separation ability, a function that is thought to be performed by the dentate gyrus (DG). These tasks are therefore particularly useful in animal models of hippocampal, and specifically DG, function, but they additionally permit discernment of changes in pattern separation from those in working memory.
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- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92292]
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