Skip to main content
Log in

Amnesic effects of bilateral lesions placed in the hyperstriatum ventrale of the chick after imprinting

  • Published:
Experimental Brain Research Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Summary

The purpose of this study was to investigate whether bilateral lesions to a part of the hyperstriatum ventrale (IMHV) impair retention if they are placed after chicks have been imprinted. Domestic chicks were hatched and reared in darkness and exposed to an imprinting (training) stimulus for 2 h commencing ≃ 22 h post hatch. The chicks were then anaesthetised and bilateral lesions placed in IMHV (N = 16) birds, hyperstriatum accessorium (HA; N = 16) or the lateral part of the cerebral hemispheres (LCA; N = 16). Forty-eight sham-operated chicks served as controls. Chicks were returned to the dark incubator, and, 15–20 h after the operation, their approach towards the training stimulus and to a second novel stimulus was measured. The controls and the chicks with lesions in HA and LCA showed a strong preference for the training stimulus and hence a high level of retention. The preferences of these three experimental groups did not differ significantly from one another. The mean preference of chicks with lesions in IMHV was significantly less than that of the sham-operated controls (P<0.01) and of chicks lesioned in HA (P<0.05). Bilateral lesions to IMHV therefore selectively impair retention of a preference acquired through imprinting. This impairment is unlikely to be a non-specific consequence of defective sensory processing or motor performance because the four groups did not differ from each other in (i) the time taken accurately to peck a rocking bead, (ii) the accuracy of pecking millet seeds and (iii) the performance of a simultaneous visual discrimination task involving heat reinforcement.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Bateson PPG (1979) Brief exposure to a novel stimulus during imprinting in chicks and its influence on subsequent preferences. Anim Learn Behav 7: 259–262

    Google Scholar 

  • Bateson PPG, Wainwright AAP (1972) The effects of prior exposure to light on the imprinting process in domestic chicks. Behaviour 42: 279–290

    Google Scholar 

  • Bateson PPG, Jaeckel JB (1974) Imprinting: correlations between activities of chicks during training and testing. Anim Behav 22: 899–906

    Google Scholar 

  • Bateson PPG, Horn G, Rose SPR (1972) Effects of early experience on regional incorporation of precursors into RNA and protein in the chick brain. Brain Res 39: 449–465

    Google Scholar 

  • Bateson PPG, Rose SPR, Horn G (1973) Imprinting: lasting effects on uracil incorporation into chick brain. Science 181: 576–578

    Google Scholar 

  • Bateson PPG, Horn G, Rose SPR (1975) Imprinting: correlations between behaviour and incorporation of [14C]-uracil into chick brain. Brain Res 84: 207–220

    Google Scholar 

  • Bradley PM, Horn G (1979) Efferent connections of the hyperstriatum ventrale in the chick brain. J Anat 128: 414–415

    Google Scholar 

  • Bradley PM, Davies DC, Horn G (1982) Connections of the hyperstriatum ventrale in the domestic chick (Gallus domesticus). J Comp Neurol (in press)

  • Cherfas JJ (1978) Simultaneous colour discrimination in chicks is improved by brief exposure to light. Anim Behav 26: 1–5

    Google Scholar 

  • Cipolla-Neto J, Horn G, McCabe BJ (1982) The effects of sequential lesions to hyperstriatum ventrale on the retention of a preference acquired through imprinting. Exp Brain Res 48: 22–27

    Google Scholar 

  • Fellows BJ (1967) Chance stimulus sequences for discrimination tasks. Psychol Bull 67: 68–92

    Google Scholar 

  • Horn G, Rose SPR, Bateson PPG (1973) Experience and plasticity in the central nervous system. Science 181: 506–514

    Google Scholar 

  • Horn G, McCabe BJ, Bateson PPG (1979) An autoradiographic study of the chick brain after imprinting. Brain Res 168: 361–373

    Google Scholar 

  • Horn G, Cipolla-Neto J, McCabe BJ (1980) Imprinting: effects of sequential lesions to medial hyperstriatum ventrale (MHV). Proceedings of the XXVIIIth International Congress of Physiological Sciences, Budapest

  • Kohsaka S-I, Takamatsu K, Aoki E, Tsukada Y (1979) Metabolic mapping of chick brain after imprinting using [14C]-2-deoxyglucose. Brain Res 172: 539–544

    Google Scholar 

  • Lewis DJ, Misanin JR, Miller RR (1968) Recovery of memory following amnesia. Nature 220: 704–705

    Google Scholar 

  • McCabe BJ, Cipolla-Neto J, Horn G, Bateson PPG (1979) Brain lesions and imprinting. Neurosci Lett [Supl] 3: S381

    Google Scholar 

  • McCabe BJ, Horn G, Bateson PPG (1981) Effects of restricted lesions of the chick forebrain on the acquisition of filial preferences during imprinting. Brain Res 205: 29–37

    Google Scholar 

  • Salzen EA, Sluckin W (1959) The incidence of the following response and the duration of responsiveness in domestic fowl. Anim Behav 7: 172–179

    Google Scholar 

  • Salzen EA, Parker DM, Williamson AJ (1975) A forebrain lesion preventing imprinting in domestic chicks. Exp Brain Res 24: 145–157

    Google Scholar 

  • Salzen EA, Parker DM, Williamson AJ (1978) Forebrain lesions and retention of imprinting in domestic chicks. Exp Brain Res 31: 107–116

    Google Scholar 

  • Smith FV, Bird MW (1963) The relative attraction for the domestic chick of combinations of stimuli in different sensory modalities. Anim Behav 11: 300–305

    Google Scholar 

  • Webster KE (1974) Changing concepts of the organisation of the central visual pathways in birds. In: Bellairs R, Gray EG (eds) Essays on the nervous system. A Festschrift for Professor JZ Young. Clarendon Press, Oxford, pp 258–298

    Google Scholar 

  • Winer BJ (1971) Statistical principles in experimental design. 2nd edn. McGraw-Hill, Tokyo

    Google Scholar 

  • Zolman JF (1968) Discrimination learning in young chicks with heat reinforcement. Psychol Rec 18: 303–309

    Google Scholar 

  • Zolman JF (1976) Developmental constraints on conditioning. In: Petrinovitch L, McGough JL (eds) Knowing, thinking and believing. Plenum Press, New York, pp 85–114

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Additional information

Supported by grants from the Science Research Council, the Leverhulme Trust, the Wellcome Trust and FAPESP (Brazil)

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

McCabe, B.J., Cipolla-Neto, J., Horn, G. et al. Amnesic effects of bilateral lesions placed in the hyperstriatum ventrale of the chick after imprinting. Exp Brain Res 48, 13–21 (1982). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00239568

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00239568

Key words

Navigation