TY - JOUR
T1 - Lesions of the ventro-medial basal ganglia impair the reinforcement but not the recall of memorized color discrimination in domestic chicks
AU - Izawa, Ei Ichi
AU - Zachar, Gergely
AU - Aoki, Naoya
AU - Koga, Kiyoko
AU - Matsushima, Toshiya
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by scientific grants to T.M. from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (#13640677), and from the Takeda Science Foundation. G.Z. was supported by a research fellowship from the Daiko Foundation. E.I. is a research fellow (DC) of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS).
PY - 2002/11/15
Y1 - 2002/11/15
N2 - Effects of bilateral chemical lesions of the ventro-medial basal ganglia (lobus parolfactorius, LPO) were examined in 3-9-day-old domestic chicks. In experiment-1, chicks were trained to peck at a blue bead that was associated with drops of water as a reward. Addition of passive avoidance training using a bitter yellow bead resulted in highly selective pecking between blue and yellow. LPO lesion (given 3-5 h after training) did not impair the selectivity when chicks were tested 24 h afterwards, while the novel reinforcement using a red bead was severely impaired. In experiment-2, chicks were trained in a GO/NO-GO color discrimination task with food reward. Trained chicks received bilateral LPO lesions, and they were tested 48 h afterwards for the number of pecks and latency of the first peck in each trial. The LPO lesion did not impair the recall of memorized color discrimination in tests, while the chicks were severely deficient in post-operative novel training. These results confirm that: (1) bilateral LPO ablation does not interfere with selective pecking based on the memorized color cues; but (2) it impairs reinforcement in novel training. LPO is thus supposed to be involved in acquisition, rather than execution of memorized behaviors.
AB - Effects of bilateral chemical lesions of the ventro-medial basal ganglia (lobus parolfactorius, LPO) were examined in 3-9-day-old domestic chicks. In experiment-1, chicks were trained to peck at a blue bead that was associated with drops of water as a reward. Addition of passive avoidance training using a bitter yellow bead resulted in highly selective pecking between blue and yellow. LPO lesion (given 3-5 h after training) did not impair the selectivity when chicks were tested 24 h afterwards, while the novel reinforcement using a red bead was severely impaired. In experiment-2, chicks were trained in a GO/NO-GO color discrimination task with food reward. Trained chicks received bilateral LPO lesions, and they were tested 48 h afterwards for the number of pecks and latency of the first peck in each trial. The LPO lesion did not impair the recall of memorized color discrimination in tests, while the chicks were severely deficient in post-operative novel training. These results confirm that: (1) bilateral LPO ablation does not interfere with selective pecking based on the memorized color cues; but (2) it impairs reinforcement in novel training. LPO is thus supposed to be involved in acquisition, rather than execution of memorized behaviors.
KW - Anticipation
KW - Caudate-putamen
KW - Evaluation
KW - Neostriatum
KW - Nucleus accumbens
KW - Passive avoidance task
KW - Reward
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U2 - 10.1016/S0166-4328(02)00179-1
DO - 10.1016/S0166-4328(02)00179-1
M3 - Article
C2 - 12429402
AN - SCOPUS:0037111913
SN - 0166-4328
VL - 136
SP - 405
EP - 414
JO - Behavioural Brain Research
JF - Behavioural Brain Research
IS - 2
ER -