Object recognition in rats and mice: a one-trial non-matching-to-sample learning task to study 'recognition memory'

被引:0
|
作者
Rick A Bevins
Joyce Besheer
机构
[1] 238 Burnett Hall,Department of Psychology
[2] University of Nebraska-Lincoln,Department of Psychiatry and Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies
[3] University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill,undefined
来源
Nature Protocols | 2006年 / 1卷
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摘要
Rats and mice have a tendency to interact more with a novel object than with a familiar object. This tendency has been used by behavioral pharmacologists and neuroscientists to study learning and memory. A popular protocol for such research is the object-recognition task. Animals are first placed in an apparatus and allowed to explore an object. After a prescribed interval, the animal is returned to the apparatus, which now contains the familiar object and a novel object. Object recognition is distinguished by more time spent interacting with the novel object. Although the exact processes that underlie this 'recognition memory' requires further elucidation, this method has been used to study mutant mice, aging deficits, early developmental influences, nootropic manipulations, teratological drug exposure and novelty seeking.
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页码:1306 / 1311
页数:5
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