The effects of bilateral striatal lesions on the acquisition of an operant test of short term memory
- 1 October 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in NeuroReport
- Vol. 6 (15) , 2049-2053
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001756-199510010-00023
Abstract
It has been previously shown that lesions of the dorsal striatum can disrupt performance on a variety of cognitive tasks related to frontal cortex function. In order to extend these studies, we have investigated the effects of bilateral striatal lesions on the acquisition of an operant test of short term memory in the delayed non-matching to position paradigm. The animals received either ibotenic acid or saline control injections into the dorsal striatum prior to training on the non-matching task. Striatal lesions retarded acquisition of the task, although with further training the lesioned rats achieved a similar level of asymptotic performance to the control animals. The lesioned rats also exhibited marked nocturnal locomotor hyperactivity when tested under conditions of food deprivation, but not when tested satiated. The results indicate that bilateral striatal lesions induce mild deficits in the acquisition of the discrimination rules involved in performance of the delayed non-matching to position task. The present study does not support a role for the neostriatum in the specific mediation of short term memory in a operant DNMTP test.Keywords
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