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Publication : Effects of neocortical ectopias and environmental enrichment on Hebb-Williams maze learning in BXSB mice.

First Author  Hoplight BJ Year  2001
Journal  Neurobiol Learn Mem Volume  76
Issue  1 Pages  33-45
PubMed ID  11525251 Mgi Jnum  J:70194
Mgi Id  MGI:2136558 Doi  10.1006/nlme.2000.3980
Citation  Hoplight BJ, et al. (2001) Effects of neocortical ectopias and environmental enrichment on Hebb-Williams maze learning in BXSB mice. Neurobiol Learn Mem 76(1):33-45
abstractText  Approximately 40-60% of BXSB mice have neocortical ectopias, a developmental anomaly characterized by migration of neurons into the neuron-sparse layer I of cortex. Previous studies have shown that ectopic BXSB mice have superior reference, but inferior working, memory on spatial tasks. Female BXSB mice were housed either in an enriched environment or in standard cages at weaning. Subsequently, these animals were tested on four of the Hebb-Williams mazes in a water-based version of this maze. Theoretically, two of the maze configurations placed greater emphasis on reference memory to find the goal, whereas the other two favored working memory. Ectopics reared in standard housing conditions were better than nonectopics on mazes that favored the use of reference memory, but poorer on mazes that favored working memory. In contrast, subjects raised in the enriched environment showed no ectopia differences. A comparison of enriched and standard housing conditions found that the enriched animals had better reference memory but poorer working memory. The latter effect may be because the enriched environment, although more stimulating, did not change in time or space; and other researchers have shown that daily replacement of stimuli in complex environments is correlated with better working memory.
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