Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Older pet dogs have trouble learning new routes in a maze
By Mongillo, Paolo et al.·Published in Age (Dordrecht, Netherlands)·2013·Dipartimento di Biomedicina Comparata e Alimentazione, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Spatial reversal learning is impaired by age in pet dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of pet dogs, mostly older than 8 years, was tested on their ability to learn and remember routes in a maze. While younger dogs performed well, older dogs struggled significantly when the correct route was changed, indicating that age can affect their ability to adapt to new information. The older dogs also took longer to respond during the tasks, suggesting that their processing speed may be slower. This study highlights how aging can impact cognitive function in dogs, which may help owners understand changes in their pets' behavior as they get older.
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Abstract
Aged dogs spontaneously develop progressive decline in both cognitive and behavioral function, in addition to neuropathological changes, that collectively parallel several aspects of human aging and Alzheimer's disease progression and likely contribute to the development of canine cognitive dysfunction syndrome. In the current study, ethologically relevant spatial learning, retention, and reversal learning tasks were conducted, with the goal of expanding canine neuropsychological testing to pet dogs. Initially, dogs (N = 44, aged 7.8 ± 2.8 years, mean ± SD) had to learn which of two alternative routes successfully led out of a T-maze. Two weeks later, long-term memory retention was assessed, immediately followed by a reversal learning task in which the previously correct route out of the maze was reversed compared with the initial learning and memory retention tasks. No effects of age were evident on the learning or retention tasks. However, older (≥ 8 years) dogs were significantly impaired on the reversal learning task compared with younger ones (< 8 years). Moreover, trial response latency was significantly increased in aged dogs across both the initial and reversal learning tasks but not on the retention task, which suggests that processing speed was impaired by increasing age during the acquisition of novel spatial information but not during performance of previously learned responses. Overall, the current study provides a framework for assessing cognitive function in pet dogs, which should improve understanding of the effects of aging on cognition in the dog population.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23529504/