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Sunday, August 03, 2008 - 3:14 PM
Louis J. Sheehan. People call on a rich background of relevant experiences to organize
and remember new material. Rats do the same, and with surprising speed,
say Dorothy Tse of the University of Edinburgh and her coworkers. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com
Prior
studies, which have focused on task learning unrelated to preexisting
knowledge, indicate that a brain region called the hippocampus
incorporates new facts and events into memory. The hippocampus
gradually yields to another structure, the neocortex, as new memories
become stronger. This process typically takes at least 1 month in
rodents and a few years in people. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com
Tse's team trained groups of
rats to associate six flavors, including banana and bacon, with six
designated spots within a laboratory-test area. Rats received food with
a particular flavor in one of four entries to the area and then could
obtain more of it by going to the correct location. The animals learned
all six flavor-place associations in 1 month. Further experiments
indicated that the animals had also developed a framework of knowledge
about relations between places and flavors that enabled them to learn
new pairings remarkably quickly. The rats remembered novel flavor-place
associations after just one trial and retained this information for at
least 2 weeks, the scientists report in the April 6 Science. The
rats' formation of a knowledge framework spurred the neocortex to
integrate new information into memory in record time, the scientists
propose. Surgical removal of the hippocampus 48 hours after the rats
had rapidly learned new flavor-place associations left those memories
intact, a sign that the neocortex had already taken charge of the
material.
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