Barnes maze test for spatial memory: A new, sensitive scoring system for mouse search strategies
Laura Rodríguez, Myriam I. Scheuber, Huimin Shan, Marie Braun, Martin E. Schwab
Abstract
The Barnes maze is a task used to assess spatial learning and memory in rodents. It requires animals to learn the position of a hole that can be used as an escape from a bright and open arena. The often-used parameters of latency and path length to measure learning and memory do not reflect the different navigation strategies chosen by the animals. Here, we propose an 11-point scoring scheme to classify the search strategies developed by the animals during the initial training as well as after the change of the escape target to a new position. Strategy scores add an important dimension to time and path length to assess the behavior in this popular maze.
Topics & Concepts
Task (project management)Spatial learningLatency (audio)Path integrationPsychologyBarnes mazeArtificial intelligenceSpatial memoryWater mazeComputer scienceCognitive psychologyNeuroscienceMachine learningCognitionWorking memoryHippocampusTelecommunicationsEconomicsManagementMemory and Neural MechanismsZebrafish Biomedical Research ApplicationsNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research