Testing for Metacognitive Responding Using an Odor-based Delayed Match-to-Sample Test in Rats
Autor: | Aidan J. Preston, Taylor B. Wise, Keith A. Lee, Victoria L. Templer |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Male
comparative cognition Sample (material) General Chemical Engineering Metacognition odor memory working memory General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Memory Issue 136 Metamemory Comparative cognition Animals 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences 050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology cognitive control memory awareness Episodic memory Behavior General Immunology and Microbiology Working memory General Neuroscience 05 social sciences Cognition episodic memory Test (assessment) Rats memory monitoring Memory Short-Term Mental Recall Odorants Psychology 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Cognitive psychology |
Zdroj: | Journal of Visualized Experiments : JoVE |
ISSN: | 1940-087X |
DOI: | 10.3791/57489-v |
Popis: | Metamemory involves the cognitive ability to assess the strength of one's memories. To explore the possibility of metamemory in non-human animals, numerous behavioral tasks have been created, many of which utilize an option to decline memory tests. To assess metamemory in rats, we utilized this decline-test option paradigm by adapting previous visual delayed-match-to-sample tests (DMTS)1,2 developed for primate species to an odor-based test suitable for rodents. First, rats are given a sample to remember by digging in a cup of scented sand. After a delay, the rat is presented with four distinctly scented cups, one of which contains the identical scent experienced during the sample; if this matching cup is selected, then the rat obtains a preferred, larger reward. Selection of any of the other three non-matching sand-filled scented cups results in no reward. Retention intervals are individually titrated such that subjects perform between 40 and 70% correct, therefore ensuring rats sometimes remember and sometimes forget the sample. Here, the operational definition of metamemory is the ability to distinguish between the presence and absence of memory through behavioral responding. Towards this end, on two-thirds of trials, a decline option is presented in addition to the four choice cups (choice trials). If the decline-test option- an unscented colored sand cup, is selected, the subject receives a smaller less-preferred reward and avoids the memory test. On the remaining third of trials, the decline-test option is not available (forced trials), causing subjects to guess the correct cup when the sample is forgotten. On choice tests, subjects that know when they remember should select the decline option when memory is weak rather than take the test and choose incorrectly. Therefore, significantly higher performance on chosen tests as compared to forced memory tests is indicative of the adaptive use of the decline-test response and metacognitive responding. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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