Impairment of place navigation of rats in the Morris water maxe by intermitten light is inversely related to the duration of the flash
La Habana; s.n; 1994. 4 p. graf.
Non-conventional
in English
| LILACS
| ID: lil-223638
Responsible library:
CU414.1
Localization: CU414.1
ABSTRACT
The relative contribution of allocentric and egocentric orientation to place navigation was studied in Long-Evans rats trained in the Morris water maze in permanent light, permanent darkness or flickering light (1 Hz, flash duration 25, 100, 300, 500 and 800 ms). After 3 days of training (nine blocks of four trials), escape latencies were 38 and 7 s in the dark- and light-trained groups, respectively, and corresponded to the light-dark ratio in the flicker-trained groups. Shorter-than-predicted latencies in the 25- and 100-ms groups reflected visual persistence of 200 ms. The difference between flickerin light (100 ms) and permanent light performance during acquisition of place navigation to a new target was significantly smaller in rats previously trained in light than in naive animals. It is concluded that longer flash duration gives the animals more opportunities to locate levant landmarks and to estimate their distance
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Collection:
International databases
Database:
LILACS
Main subject:
Rats
/
Hippocampus
/
Memory
Type of study:
Prognostic study
Limits:
Animals
Language:
English
Year:
1994
Document type:
Non-conventional