School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, , St Andrews, Fife, UK, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, , St Andrews, Fife, UK, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Lethbridge, , Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada , T1K 3M4.
Proc Biol Sci. 2014 Apr 16;281(1784):20140301. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2014.0301. Print 2014 Jun 7.
While most animals live in a three-dimensional world, they move through it to different extents depending on their mode of locomotion: terrestrial animals move vertically less than do swimming and flying animals. As nearly everything we know about how animals learn and remember locations in space comes from two-dimensional experiments in the horizontal plane, here we determined whether the use of three-dimensional space by a terrestrial and a flying animal was correlated with memory for a rewarded location. In the cubic mazes in which we trained and tested rats and hummingbirds, rats moved more vertically than horizontally, whereas hummingbirds moved equally in the three dimensions. Consistent with their movement preferences, rats were more accurate in relocating the horizontal component of a rewarded location than they were in the vertical component. Hummingbirds, however, were more accurate in the vertical dimension than they were in the horizontal, a result that cannot be explained by their use of space. Either as a result of evolution or ontogeny, it appears that birds and rats prioritize horizontal versus vertical components differently when they remember three-dimensional space.
虽然大多数动物生活在三维世界中,但它们的运动方式不同,在垂直方向上的移动程度也不同:陆地动物的垂直移动比游泳和飞行动物少。由于我们几乎所有关于动物如何在空间中学习和记忆位置的知识都来自于水平平面上的二维实验,因此在这里,我们确定了陆地动物和飞行动物对三维空间的使用是否与对奖励位置的记忆有关。在我们训练和测试大鼠和蜂鸟的立方迷宫中,大鼠在垂直方向上的移动比在水平方向上多,而蜂鸟在三个维度上的移动则相等。与它们的运动偏好一致,大鼠在重新定位奖励位置的水平分量时比垂直分量更准确。然而,蜂鸟在垂直方向上比在水平方向上更准确,这一结果不能用它们对空间的使用来解释。无论是由于进化还是个体发生,鸟类和大鼠在记忆三维空间时似乎对水平与垂直分量的优先顺序不同。