Tactile perception and working memory in rats and humans

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Abstract

Primates can store sensory stimulus parameters in working memory for subsequent manipulation, but until now, there has been no demonstration of this capacity in rodents. Here we report tactile working memory in rats. Each stimulus is a vibration, generated as a series of velocity values sampled from a normal distribution. To perform the task, the rat positions its whiskers to receive two such stimuli, base and comparison, separated by a variable delay. It then judges which stimulus had greater velocity SD. In analogous experiments, humans compare two vibratory stimuli on the fingertip. We demonstrate that the ability of rats to hold base stimulus information (for up to 8 s) and their acuity in assessing stimulus differences overlap the performance demonstrated by humans. This experiment highlights the ability of rats to perceive the statistical structure of vibrations and reveals their previously unknown capacity to store sensory information in working memory.

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APA

Fassihi, A., Akrami, A., Esmaeili, V., & Diamond, M. E. (2014). Tactile perception and working memory in rats and humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 111(6), 2331–2336. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1315171111

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