Hampton R R, Shettleworth S J
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Behav Neurosci. 1996 Oct;110(5):946-64. doi: 10.1037//0735-7044.110.5.946.
Food-storing birds maintain in memory a large and constantly changing catalog of the locations of stored food. The hippocampus of food-storing black-capped chickadees (Parus atricapillus) is proportionally larger than that of nonstoring dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis). Chickadees perform better than do juncos in an operant test of spatial non-matching-to-sample (SNMTS), and chickadees are more resistant to interference in this paradigm. Hippocampal lesions attenuate performance in SNMTS and increase interference. In tests of continuous spatial alternation (CSA), juncos perform better than chickadees. CSA performance also declines following hippocampal lesions. By itself, sensitivity of a given task to hippocampal damage does not predict the direction of memory differences between storing and nonstoring species.
储存食物的鸟类在记忆中保留着大量且不断变化的储存食物位置目录。储存食物的黑头山雀(Parus atricapillus)的海马体相对比不储存食物的暗眼灯草鹀(Junco hyemalis)的海马体更大。在空间样本不匹配(SNMTS)的操作性测试中,山雀比灯草鹀表现更好,并且山雀在这种范式中对干扰的抵抗力更强。海马体损伤会削弱SNMTS的表现并增加干扰。在连续空间交替(CSA)测试中,灯草鹀比山雀表现更好。海马体损伤后CSA表现也会下降。就其本身而言,给定任务对海马体损伤的敏感性并不能预测储存和不储存食物物种之间记忆差异的方向。