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Title: A water-maze discrimination learning deficit in the rat following lesion of the habenula. Author: Thornton EW, Davies C. Journal: Physiol Behav; 1991 Apr; 49(4):819-22. PubMed ID: 1881990. Abstract: Although the habenula occupies a potentially important link between forebrain and midbrain, lesion of the complex produces little effect in most standard behavioral paradigms. More recently, it has been shown that such lesions may impair the ability to initiate or switch responses appropriate to environmental contingencies but only under demanding conditions. Although such deficits have been described as response failures, they could equally well be attributed to restricted attentional mechanisms. The present study was designed to further substantiate a role for the habenula in acquisition of adaptive behavior under demanding conditions and to examine the possible contribution of attentional failure. The initial response preference to 'escape' onto platforms situated in two chambers at the distal end of a water tank was established for groups of lesioned and sham-operated rats. Rats were subsequently trained in discrete trials to escape by choosing the side of the nonpreferred chamber. During training the choice of escape chamber was cued by distracting black or white visual stimuli displayed on the tank sides and above the entrances to the chamber. These were moved over trials so as to be nonpredictive of the appropriate escape position. Lesioned animals were significantly impaired in the acquisition of this positional discrimination. Analysis of response times suggested that both lesion and control animals were attending to the irrelevant visual cue. The results confirm a behavioral inflexibility following lesion of the habenula and suggest that this deficit cannot be explained simply in terms of a failure to attend to environmental cues. The lesion deficit also could not be attributed to a response perseveration.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]