Abstract
Norway rats have been shown to depend on short-term spatial memory to find food on a radial arm maze (RAM), but what locomotor search tactics are involved in using this memory effectively? Four experiments distinguished tactics of distance minimizing, central-place search, trail following, thigmotactic search, and random search by using different configurations of a RAM placed flat on the floor of an arena. These search tactics make similar predictions on an elevated RAM but predict different outcomes on a floor RAM because the rats are free to approach the food from any direction. After initial trials dominated by exploration, rats traveled along arms to food, even when the resultant distance was up to three times the minimum distance. With no food present, rats also traveled along arms; with no arms up to present, they traveled along walls to food. It appears that both maze arms and arena walls engage mechanisms related to trail following in rats.
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This study was supported in part by National Science Foundation Grants IBN 9408366, IBN-9817175, and BIR-9413220. C.M.H. was supported by National Research Service Award 1F32MH10662. Thanks to John Roche for comments.
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Hoffman, C.M., Timberlake, W., Leffel, J. et al. How is radial arm maze behavior in rats related to locomotor search tactics?. Animal Learning & Behavior 27, 426–444 (1999). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209979
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209979