Title Perirhinal cortex lesions impair tests of object recognition memory but spare novelty detection
Authors OLARTE SÁNCHEZ, CRISTIAN MANUEL, Amin, Eman , Warburton, E. Clea , Aggleton, John P.
External publication Si
Means Eur J Neurosci
Scope Article
Nature Científica
JCR Quartile 2
SJR Quartile 1
JCR Impact 2.975
SJR Impact 2.138
Publication date 01/12/2015
ISI 000368244300010
DOI 10.1111/ejn.13106
Abstract The present study examined why perirhinal cortex lesions in rats impair the spontaneous ability to select novel objects in preference to familiar objects, when both classes of object are presented simultaneously. The study began by repeating this standard finding, using a test of delayed object recognition memory. As expected, the perirhinal cortex lesions reduced the difference in exploration times for novel vs. familiar stimuli. In contrast, the same rats with perirhinal cortex lesions appeared to perform normally when the preferential exploration of novel vs. familiar objects was tested sequentially, i.e. when each trial consisted of only novel or only familiar objects. In addition, there was no indication that the perirhinal cortex lesions reduced total levels of object exploration for novel objects, as would be predicted if the lesions caused novel stimuli to appear familiar. Together, the results show that, in the absence of perirhinal cortex tissue, rats still receive signals of object novelty, although they may fail to link that information to the appropriate object. Consequently, these rats are impaired in discriminating the source of object novelty signals, leading to deficits on simultaneous choice tests of recognition.
Keywords familiarity; habituation; hippocampus; parahippocampal cortex; recognition memory
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