Disrupting circadian rhythms in rats induces retrograde amnesia

Publication date

1985

Authors

Fekete, Mátyás
Ree, J.M. van
Niesink, Raymond J.M.
Wied, D. de

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Disrupting circadian organization in rats by phase-shifting the illumination cycle or by exposure to a reversed day/night cycle or to continuous light, resulted in retrograde amnesia for passive avoidance behavior. This retrograde amnesia induced by phase-shifting lasted at least 2 days, and gradually diminished the longer the rats were exposed to the new illumination cycle. Retention performance was not impaired when rats were exposed to phase-shifting for 3–5 days before the learning trial. The retrograde amnesia due to changing the illumination cycle is probably due to retrieval disturbances. Extinction of active avoidance behavior was facilitated in rats exposed to a phase-shifted illuminiation cycle, but social and explorative behavior of rats tested in dyadic encounters were not affected by changing the normal illumination cycle. It is concluded that phase-shifting may result in amnesia for newly learned behavioral responses, but not for more innate behavioral patterns.

Keywords

Circadian organization, Retrograde amnesia, Active avoidance behavior, Day/night cycle, Passive avoidance behavior, Social behavior

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