Generalization in Place Learning and Geometry Knowledge in Rats

  1. Luca Tommasi1,3 and
  2. Catherine Thinus-Blanc2
  1. 1Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution & Cognition Research, A-3422, Altenberg, Austria2 Laboratory of Neurophysiology and Neuropsychology, EMI-U Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale 9926, Université de la Mediterranée, Faculty of Medicine La Timone 27, Marseille Cedex 5, France

Abstract

Rats were trained to search for a food reward hidden under sawdust in the center of a square-shaped enclosure designed to force orientation on the basis of the overall geometry of the environment. They were then tested in a number of enclosures differing in shape and in size (rectangular-, double-side square-, and equilateral triangle-shaped enclosures). Results showed that rats transferred their place-finding ability to the novel enclosures. Our results add evidence to the hypothesis that the evolutionary roots of spatial cognition entail a primitive encoding of geometric relationships, as already shown using other tasks in rats.

Footnotes

  • Article and publication are at http://www.learnmem.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/lm.60904.

    • Accepted January 7, 2004.
    • Received March 10, 2003.
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