In 3 habituation experiments, rats with excitotoxic lesions of the perirhinal cortex were found to be indistinguishable from control rats. Two of the habituation experiments examined the habituation of suppression of responding on an appetitive, instrumental baseline. One of those experiments used stimuli selected from the visual modality (lights), the other used auditory stimuli. The third experiment examined habituation of suppression of novel-flavored water consumption. In contrast to the null results on the habituation experiments, the perirhinal lesions disrupted transfer performance on a configural, visual discrimination, indicating the behavioral effectiveness of the lesions. Implications for comparator theories of habituation are considered, and it is concluded that others' demonstrations of the sensitivity of object recognition to perirhinal cortex damage is not the result of standard habituation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0017444 | DOI Listing |
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Department of Cognitive and Psychological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
For most of my career, I focused on understanding how and where spatial context, the place where things happen, is represented in the brain. My interest in this began in the early 1990's, during my postdoctoral training with David Amaral, when we defined the rodent homolog of the primate parahippocampal cortex, a region implicated in processing spatial and contextual information. We parceled out the caudal portion of the rat perirhinal cortex (PER) and called it the postrhinal cortex (POR).
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Department of Neuroscience, Medical University of South Carolina, Basic Science Building 416, MSC 510, 173 Ashley Avenue, Charleston, SC 29425, USA.
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