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Article

Rats use a sense of direction to alternate on T-mazes located in adjacent rooms

Details

Citation

Dudchenko P & Davidson M (2002) Rats use a sense of direction to alternate on T-mazes located in adjacent rooms. Animal Cognition, 5 (2), pp. 115-118. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-002-0134-y

Abstract
Lister hooded rats were trained on a forced-sample T-maze alternation task in an environment lacking spatial landmarks. An early study of spontaneous alternation on the T-maze had shown that rats use a "spatial sense" to select alternate maze arms across mazes. As this phenomenon may provide a useful tool for studying the neural substrates of a directional sense, we wished to confirm this finding on a different version of the T-maze task, with well-trained animals. We found that rats successfully selected the appropriate maze arm when the choice phase of the task was presented on a second maze, oriented in the same direction, and located in an adjacent room. However, choice performance fell to chance level when the second maze was oriented 90¡ã relative to the first. This result suggests that the rats do not simply alternate turns across the two environments, but rather that they rely on a sense of direction that is carried across environments.

Keywords
T-maze; Spatial learning; Spatial alternation

Journal
Animal Cognition: Volume 5, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date30/06/2002
Publication date online28/05/2002
URL
PublisherSpringer Verlag
ISSN1435-9448
eISSN1435-9456

People (1)

Professor Paul Dudchenko

Professor Paul Dudchenko

Professor, Psychology