Gagliardo A, Bonadonna F, Divac I
Dipartamento di Scienze del Comportamento animale e dell'Uomo, Universita di Pisa, Italy.
Behav Brain Res. 1996 Aug;78(2):155-62. doi: 10.1016/0166-4328(95)00243-x.
This study further explored functional similarities of mammalian prefrontal cortex and its presumed equivalent in pigeons. Our results show that the performance of delayed alternation of pigeons in an Y-maze is impaired following ablations of the prefrontal equivalent together with the corticoid but not of the corticoid alone. In the same maze, discrimination between vertical and horizontal stripes was unimpaired regardless of the lesion. Our results added the following new information. (1) Corticoid is not essentially involved in mediation of delayed responding. (2) Like monkeys, pigeons take much fewer trials to learn delayed alternation in a maze than in an operant chamber. (3) Lesions of the pigeon equivalent of the prefrontal cortex impair delayed responding also in the new apparatus. (4) These lesions do not impair visual pattern discrimination. Our results do not contradict the hypothesis that the postero-dorso-lateral neostriatum in pigeons is comparable to the prefrontal cortex in mammals.