Artículos de revistas
Sleep enhances recognition memory for conspecifics as bound into spatial context
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, Volumen 11,
16625153
10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00028
Autor
Sawangjit, Anuck
Kelemen, Eduard
Born, Jan
Inostroza, Marion
Institución
Resumen
© 2017 Sawangjit, Kelemen, Born and Inostroza. Social memory refers to the fundamental ability of social species to recognize their conspecifics in quite different contexts. Sleep has been shown to benefit consolidation, especially of hippocampus-dependent episodic memory whereas effects of sleep on social memory are less well studied. Here, we examined the effect of sleep on memory for conspecifics in rats. To discriminate interactions between the consolidation of social memory and of spatial context during sleep, adult Long Evans rats performed on a social discrimination task in a radial arm maze. The Learning phase comprised three 10-min sampling sessions in which the rats explored a juvenile rat presented at a different arm of the maze in each session. Then the rats were allowed to sleep (n = 18) or stayed awake (n = 18) for 120 min. During the following 10-min Test phase, the familiar juvenile rat (of the Learning phase) was presented along with a novel juvenile rat, each rat at a