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Hippocampal lesions impair spatial memory performance,but not song—A developmental study of independent memory systems in the zebra finch
Authors:David J. Bailey  Juli Wade  Colin J. Saldanha
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824;2. Department of Biological Sciences, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 18015;3. Department of Zoology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824;4. Program in Neuroscience, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824;5. Program in Cognitive Science, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 18015
Abstract:Songbirds demonstrate song‐ and spatial‐learning, forms of memory that appear distinct in formal characteristics and fitting the descriptions and criteria of procedural and episodic‐like memory function, respectively. As in other vertebrates, the neural pathways underlying these forms of memory may also be dissociable, and include the corresponding song circuit and hippocampus (HP). Whether (or not) these two memory systems interact is unknown. Interestingly, the HP distinguishes itself as a site of immediate early gene expression in response to song and as a site of estrogen synthesis, a steroid involved in song learning. Thus, an interaction between these memory systems and their anatomical substrates appears reasonable to hypothesize, particularly during development. To test this idea, juvenile male or female zebra finches received chemical lesions of the HP at various points during song learning, as did adults. Song structure, singing behavior, song preference, and spatial memory were tested in adulthood. Although lesions of the HP severely compromised HP‐dependent spatial memory function across all ages and in both sexes, we were unable to detect any effects of HP lesions on song learning, singing, or song structure in males. Interestingly, females lesioned as adults, but not as juveniles, did lose the characteristic preference for their father's song. Since compromise of the neural circuits that subserve episodic‐like memory does very little (if anything) to affect procedural‐like (song learning) memory, we conclude that these memory systems and their anatomical substrates are well dissociated in the developing male zebra finch. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 2009
Keywords:hippocampus  ibotenic acid  aromatase  immediate early gene  estrogen  songbird
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