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Do rats use shape to solve shape discriminations?

Journal

LEARNING & MEMORY
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages 287-297

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/lm.84406

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Visual discrimination tasks are increasingly used to explore the neurobiology of vision in rodents, but it remains unclear flow the animals solve these tasks: Do they process shapes holistically, or by using low-level features such as luminance and angle acuity? In the present Study we found that when discriminating triangles from squares, rats did not use shape but instead relied oil local luminance differences in the lower hemifield. A second experiment prevented this strategy by using stimuli-squares and rectangles-that varied in size and location, and for which the only constant predictor of reward was aspect ratio (ratio of height to width: a simple descriptor of shape). Rats eventually learned to use aspect ratio but only when no other discriminand was available, and performance remained very poor even at asymptote. These results suggest that although rats call process both dimensions simultaneously, they do not naturally solve shape discrimination tasks this way. This may reflect either a failure to visually process global shape information or a failure to discover shape as the discriminative stimulus in a simultaneous discrimination. Either way, our results suggest that simultaneous shape discrimination is not a good task for studies of visual perception in rodents.

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