Khani Abbas, Rainer Gregor
Visual Cognition Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Chemin du Musee 5, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Behav Processes. 2012 Jul;90(3):364-71. doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2012.03.019. Epub 2012 Apr 12.
Recognition memories are formed during perceptual experience and allow subsequent recognition of previously encountered objects as well as their distinction from novel objects. As a consequence, novel objects are generally explored longer than familiar objects by many species. This novelty preference has been documented in rodents using the novel object recognition (NOR) test, as well is in primates including humans using preferential looking time paradigms. Here, we examine novelty preference using the NOR task in tree shrew, a small animal species that is considered to be an intermediary between rodents and primates. Our paradigm consisted of three phases: arena familiarization, object familiarization sessions with two identical objects in the arena and finally a test session following a 24-h retention period with a familiar and a novel object in the arena. We employed two different object familiarization durations: one and three sessions on consecutive days. After three object familiarization sessions, tree shrews exhibited robust preference for novel objects on the test day. This was accompanied by significant reduction in familiar object exploration time, occurring largely between the first and second day of object familiarization. By contrast, tree shrews did not show a significant preference for the novel object after a one-session object familiarization. Nonetheless, they spent significantly less time exploring the familiar object on the test day compared to the object familiarization day, indicating that they did maintain a memory trace for the familiar object. Our study revealed different time courses for familiar object habituation and emergence of novelty preference, suggesting that novelty preference is dependent on well-consolidated memory of the competing familiar object. Taken together, our results demonstrate robust novelty preference of tree shrews, in general similarity to previous findings in rodents and primates.
识别记忆在感知体验过程中形成,并允许随后识别先前遇到的物体,以及将它们与新物体区分开来。因此,许多物种对新物体的探索时间通常比对熟悉物体的探索时间更长。这种对新奇事物的偏好已在啮齿动物中通过新奇物体识别(NOR)测试得到记录,在包括人类在内的灵长类动物中也通过优先注视时间范式得到记录。在这里,我们使用NOR任务在树鼩中研究新奇偏好,树鼩是一种小型动物物种,被认为是啮齿动物和灵长类动物之间的中间物种。我们的范式包括三个阶段:场地熟悉、在场地中使用两个相同物体的物体熟悉阶段,以及最后在24小时保留期后进行的测试阶段,测试阶段在场地中有一个熟悉物体和一个新物体。我们采用了两种不同的物体熟悉持续时间:连续一天和三天的阶段。在三个物体熟悉阶段后,树鼩在测试日对新物体表现出强烈的偏好。这伴随着熟悉物体探索时间的显著减少,主要发生在物体熟悉的第一天和第二天之间。相比之下,在进行了一个阶段的物体熟悉后,树鼩对新物体没有表现出显著的偏好。尽管如此,与物体熟悉日相比,它们在测试日探索熟悉物体的时间明显减少,这表明它们确实对熟悉物体保持了记忆痕迹。我们的研究揭示了熟悉物体习惯化和新奇偏好出现的不同时间进程,表明新奇偏好依赖于对竞争熟悉物体的巩固良好的记忆。综上所述,我们的结果证明了树鼩有强烈的新奇偏好,总体上与之前在啮齿动物和灵长类动物中的发现相似。