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Original Articles

Visual discrimination learning and transfer in rats with hippocampal lesions

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Pages 582-593 | Received 04 Nov 1973, Published online: 29 May 2007
 

Abstract

Two experiments were performed on rats with hippocampal brain damage and on a control group with neocortical lesions. In the first experiment the hippocampal group learned a difficult visual discrimination as promptly as the controls, and neither group was subsequently impaired by adding relevant or irrelevant background cues to the original stimuli. In the second experiment the animals learned a simultaneous visual discrimination in which the stimuli differed in both brightness and orientation. The hippocampal group was impaired relative to the controls on acquisition, and showed poorer transfer to stimuli differing only in brightness or orientation. The results are incompatible with the hypothesis which attempts to explain the effects of hippocampal damage by a widespread reduction in sensory gating, but they are consistent with a more restricted version of the same hypothesis.

Now at the Department of Psychology, University of Nottingham.

Notes

Now at the Department of Psychology, University of Nottingham.

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