Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Chronic stress leaves novelty-seeking behavior intact while impairing spatial recognition memory in the Y-maze.
- Journal:
- Stress (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
- Year:
- 2005
- Authors:
- Wright, Ryan L & Conrad, Cheryl D
- Affiliation:
- Department of Psychology · United States
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
This experiment examined whether chronic stress disrupts novelty-seeking behavior under conditions that impair spatial memory. Rats were restrained for 6 h per day for 21 days, then tested in either a traditional spatial recognition Y-maze that requires extra-maze spatial cues to navigate or a version with salient intra-maze cues in addition to the extra-maze spatial cues. As previously shown, chronic restraint stress impaired performance on the spatial version of the Y-maze. However, chronically stressed rats performed well in the intra-maze cue version. The results indicate that the deficits in Y-maze performance following chronic stress are not attributed to neophobia, but likely reflect neurochemical and/or neurobiological changes underlying spatial memory ability.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16019606/