IFIBYNE   05513
INSTITUTO DE FISIOLOGIA, BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR Y NEUROCIENCIAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Brain modularity in arthropods: Individual neurons that support ?what? but not ?where? memories.
Autor/es:
JULIETA SZTARKER; DANIEL TOMSIC
Revista:
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Editorial:
SOC NEUROSCIENCE
Referencias:
Lugar: Washington; Año: 2011 vol. 31 p. 8175 - 8180
ISSN:
0270-6474
Resumen:
Experiments with insects and crabs have demonstrated their remarkable capacity to learn and memorize complex visual features (e.g. Giurfa et al., 2001; Pedreira and Maldonado, 2003; Chittka and Niven, 2009). Such abilities are thought to require modular brain processing similar to that occurring in vertebrates (Menzel and Giurfa, 2001). Yet, physiological evidence for this type of functioning in the small brains of arthropods is still scarce (Liu et al., 1999, 2006; Menzel and Giurfa, 2001). In the crab Chasmagnathus granulatus, the learning rate as well as the long-term memory of a visual stimulus has been found to be reflected in the performance of identified lobula giant neurons (LGs; Tomsic et al., 2003). The memory can only be evoked in the training context, indicating that animals store two components of the learned experience, one related to the visual stimulus and one related to the visual context (Tomsic et al., 1998; Hermitte et al., 1999). By performing intracellular recordings in the intact animal, we show that the ability of crabs to generalize the learned stimulus into new space positions and to distinguish it from a similar but unlearned stimulus, two of the main attributes of stimulus-memory, is reflected by the performance of the LGs. Conversely, we found that LGs do not support the visual context-memory component. Our results provide physiological evidence that the memory traces regarding ?what? and ?where? are stored separately in the arthropod brain.