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The cholinergic agent physostigmine enhances short-term-memory-based performance in the developing rat.
Authors:Castro, Carl A.   Paylor, Richard   Moye, Thomas B.   Rudy, Jerry W.
Abstract:There are age-related differences in the rat's short-term memory processes. Rats 24–25 days old are 90% correct when the delay interval separating the forced run and choice run of a trial is either 10 or 30 s, but they perform at chance when the delay interval is 60 s. In contrast, the choice performance of 30-day-old rats remains constant across all delay intervals. It is reported that the cholinergic agent physostigmine dramatically improved the short-term-memory-based performance of rats 24–25 days old such that they displayed no loss in choice accuracy even when the delay interval was 60 s. No such enhanced performance was seen in rats treated with neostigmine, a peripherally acting anticholinesterase. The results support the hypothesis that postnatal maturational differences in central cholinergic systems may contribute to age-related differences in short-term memory. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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