Influence of contextual exposure on memory strength and precision for inhibitory avoidance in male and female rats
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Aversive associative learning paradigms such as inhibitory avoidance (IA) are frequently used to examine episodic-like memories in rodents. In IA, rodents learn to associate a context with a footshock, followed by testing for memory strength in the original training context and for memory precision in a similar yet distinct neutral context. The present work assessed the effects of different contextual exposure procedures on memory strength and precision in IA at both recent and remote time points using male and female Long-Evans rats. An initial experiment found that rats kept in the lit (non-shock) compartment of the IA apparatus for 60 s during training, as opposed to 10 s, displayed enhanced memory strength, with discrimination between both chambers at the recent retention test and generalization at the remote retention test. Subsequent experiments investigated the effects of contextual pre-exposure the day before training. The results indicate that pre-exposure to the neutral context promoted generalization without altering memory strength compared to the first experiment. In contrast, pre-exposure to the aversive chamber promoted discrimination and enhanced memory strength. Notably, the different procedures yielded similar effects in both sexes. However, the results also indicate an overall pattern of greater contextual discrimination in females compared to males. These findings provide evidence for how different contextual exposures influence the degree of encoding at the time of training and a behavioral foundation for future studies examining the neurobiological mechanisms underlying memory strength and precision in IA, while highlighting the importance of using both sexes in initial behavioral work.
Significance Statement
Strength and precision are two fundamental properties of memory that can be simultaneously measured using inhibitory avoidance (IA), a type of context-footshock association task. However, little is known about how different context exposures alter rats’ encoding of these memories, thereby influencing subsequent memory strength and precision. Here, we found that pre-exposure to the neutral IA chamber decreased memory precision, whereas pre-exposure to the aversive IA chamber promoted memory strength and precision. Additionally, females demonstrated overall enhanced memory precision compared to males. These results indicate that different types of contextual exposures influence initial IA encoding and add to a limited body of research examining memory strength and precision in IA in both sexes.