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The honeycomb maze provides a novel test to study hippocampal-dependent spatial navigation

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Wood, Ruth A 
Bauza, Marius 
Burton, Stephen 
Delekate, Andrea 

Abstract

Here we describe the honeycomb maze, a behavioural paradigm for the study of spatial navigation in rats. The maze consists of 37 platforms that can be raised or lowered independently. Place navigation requires an animal to go to a goal platform from any of several start platforms via a series of sequential choices. For each, the animal is confined to a raised platform and allowed to choose between two of the six adjacent platforms, the correct one being the platform with the smallest angle to the goal-heading direction. Rats learn rapidly and their choices are influenced by three factors: the angle between the two choice platforms, the distance from the goal, and the angle between the correct platform and the direction of the goal. Rats with hippocampal damage are impaired in learning and their performance is affected by all three factors. The honeycomb maze represents a marked improvement over current spatial navigation tests, such as the Morris water maze1,2,3, because it controls the choices of the animal at each point in the maze, provides the ability to assess knowledge of the goal direction from any location, enables the identification of factors influencing task performance and provides the possibility for concomitant single-cell recording.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Electrophysiology, Entorhinal Cortex, Goals, Hippocampus, Male, Maze Learning, Rats, Single-Cell Analysis, Spatial Navigation

Journal Title

Nature

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0028-0836
1476-4687

Volume Title

554

Publisher

Springer Nature
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (206682/Z/17/Z)
This work was supported by grants from the Wellcome Trust and the Gatsby Charitable Foundation to J.O. R.A.W. is an MRC Clinical Research Training Fellow, J.K. is a Wellcome Trust/Royal Society Sir Henry Dale Fellow and is supported by the Kavli Foundation Dream Team project and the Isaac Newton Trust. D.C. is funded by the Cambridge NIHR Biomedical Research Centre and by the Wellcome Trust.