Can zebrafish learn spatial tasks? An empirical analysis of place and single CS-US associative learning
- Authors
- Karnik, I., and Gerlai, R.
- ID
- ZDB-PUB-120531-1
- Date
- 2012
- Source
- Behavioural brain research 233(2): 415-421 (Journal)
- Registered Authors
- Gerlai, Robert T.
- Keywords
- zebrafish, spatial learning, relational learning, associative learning, social behavior
- MeSH Terms
-
- Animals
- Association Learning/physiology
- Behavior, Animal
- Conditioning, Classical/physiology*
- Conditioning, Operant/physiology*
- Space Perception/physiology*
- Video Recording
- Zebrafish/physiology*
- PubMed
- 22633962 Full text @ Behav. Brain Res.
The zebrafish may be an ideal tool with which genes underlying learning and memory can be identified and functionally investigated. From a translational viewpoint, relational learning and episodic memory are particularly important as their impairment is the hallmark of prevalent human neurodegenerative diseases. Recent reports suggest that zebrafish are capable of solving complex relational-type associative learning tasks, namely spatial learning tasks. However, it is not known whether good performance in these tasks was truly based upon relational learning or upon a single CS–US association. Here we study whether zebrafish can find a rewarding stimulus (sight of conspecifics) based upon a single associative cue or/and upon the location of the reward using a method conceptually similar to ‘context and cue dependent fear conditioning’ employed with rodents. Our results confirm that zebrafish can form an association between a salient visual cue and the rewarding stimulus and at the same time they can also learn where the reward is presented. Although our results do not prove that zebrafish form a dynamic spatial map of their surroundings and use this map to locate their reward, they do show that these fish perform similarly to rodents whose hippocampal function is unimpaired. These results further strengthen the notion that complex cognitive abilities exist in the zebrafish and thus they may be analyzed using the excellent genetic tool set developed for this simple vertebrate.