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Rats use strategies to make object choices in spontaneous object recognition tasks

T. W. Ross, Alexander Easton

2022Scientific Reports44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rodent spontaneous object recognition (SOR) paradigms are widely used to study the mechanisms of complex memory in many laboratories. Due to the absence of explicit reinforcement in these tasks, there is an underlying assumption that object exploratory behaviour is 'spontaneous'. However, rodents can strategise, readily adapting their behaviour depending on the current information available and prior predications formed from learning and memory. Here, using the object-place-context (episodic-like) recognition task and novel analytic methods relying on multiple trials within a single session, we demonstrate that rats use a context-based or recency-based object recognition strategy for the same types of trials, depending on task conditions. Exposure to occasional ambiguous conditions changed animals' responses towards a recency-based preference. However, more salient and predictable conditions led to animals exploring objects on the basis of episodic novelty reliant on contextual information. The results have important implications for future research using SOR tasks, especially in the way experimenters design, analyse and interpret object recognition experiments in non-human animals.

Topics & Concepts

NoveltyObject (grammar)Task (project management)Context (archaeology)Computer scienceCognitive neuroscience of visual object recognitionRecognition memoryCognitive psychologyArtificial intelligencePsychologyCognitionNeuroscienceSocial psychologyBiologyManagementPaleontologyEconomicsMemory and Neural MechanismsNeuroendocrine regulation and behaviorNeural dynamics and brain function
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