A test of the reward-value hypothesis
No Thumbnail Available
Can’t use the file because of accessibility barriers? Contact us
Date
2018-03-01
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Permanent Link
Abstract
Rats retain source memory (memory for the origin of information) over a retention interval of at least 1 week, whereas their spatial working memory (radial maze locations) decays within approximately 1 day. We have argued that different forgetting functions dissociate memory systems. However, the two tasks, in our previous work, used different reward values. The source memory task used multiple pellets of a preferred food flavor (chocolate), whereas the spatial working memory task provided access to a single pellet of standard chow-flavored food at each location. Thus, according to the reward-value hypothesis, enhanced performance in the source memory task stems from enhanced encoding/memory of a preferred reward. We tested the reward- value hypothesis by using a standard 8-arm radial maze task to compare spatial working memory accuracy of rats rewarded with either multiple chocolate or chow pellets at each location using a between-subjects design. The reward-value hypothesis predicts superior accuracy for high-valued rewards. We documented equivalent spatial memory accuracy for high- and low-value rewards. Importantly, a 24-h retention interval produced equivalent spatial working memory accuracy for both flavors. These data are inconsistent with the reward-value hypothesis and suggest that reward value does not explain our earlier findings that source memory survives unusually long retention intervals.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Smith, Alexandra E., et al. "A test of the reward-value hypothesis." Animal Cognition, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 215-220, 2018-3-1, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10071-016-1040-z.
Journal
Animal Cognition