Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience (Oct 2012)

The neural substrates of deliberative decision making: contrasting effects of hippocampus lesions on performance and vicarious trial-and-error behavior in a spatial memory task and a visual discrimination task

  • David eBett,
  • David eBett,
  • Elizabeth eAllison,
  • Lauren Hamilton Murdoch,
  • Karola eKaefer,
  • Emma Ruth Wood,
  • Paul A Dudchenko,
  • Paul A Dudchenko

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2012.00070
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Vicarious trial-and-errors (VTEs) are back-and-forth movements of the head exhibited by rodents and other animals when faced with a decision. These behaviors have recently been associated with prospective sweeps of hippocampal place cell firing, and thus may reflect a rodent model of deliberative decision-making. The aim of the current study was to test whether the hippocampus is essential for VTEs in a spatial memory task and in a simple visual discrimination task. We found that lesions of the hippocampus with ibotenic acid produced a significant impairment in the accuracy of choices in a serial spatial reversal task. In terms of VTEs, whereas sham-lesioned animals engaged in more VTE behavior prior to identifying the location of the reward as opposed to repeated trials after it had been located, the lesioned animals failed to show this difference. In contrast, damage to the hippocampus had no effect on acquisition of a visual discrimination or on the VTEs seen in this task. For both lesion and sham-lesion animals, adding an additional choice to the visual discrimination increased the number of VTEs and decreased the accuracy of choices. Together, these results suggest that the hippocampus may be specifically involved in vicarious trial-and-error behavior during spatial decision making.

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