4.4 Article

Use of an Eight-arm Radial Water Maze to Assess Working and Reference Memory Following Neonatal Brain Injury

期刊

出版社

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/50940

关键词

Behavior; Issue 82; working memory; reference memory; hypoxia-ischemia; radial arm maze; water maze

资金

  1. Rhode Island Idea Network for Biomedical Research excellence (RIINBRE)
  2. NIH National Center for Research Resources [P20 RR16457-12]
  3. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute Of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health [R15HD077544]

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Working and reference memory are commonly assessed using the land based radial arm maze. However, this paradigm requires pretraining, food deprivation, and may introduce scent cue confounds. The eight-arm radial water maze is designed to evaluate reference and working memory performance simultaneously by requiring subjects to use extra-maze cues to locate escape platforms and remedies the limitations observed in land based radial arm maze designs. Specifically, subjects are required to avoid the arms previously used for escape during each testing day (working memory) as well as avoid the fixed arms, which never contain escape platforms (reference memory). Re-entries into arms that have already been used for escape during a testing session (and thus the escape platform has been removed) and re-entries into reference memory arms are indicative of working memory deficits. Alternatively, first entries into reference memory arms are indicative of reference memory deficits. We used this maze to compare performance of rats with neonatal brain injury and sham controls following induction of hypoxiaischemia and show significant deficits in both working and reference memory after eleven days of testing. This protocol could be easily modified to examine many other models of learning impairment.

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