Previous work has suggested that the hippocampus (NPC) is not a functionall
y homogenous structure, because lesions of the septal pole have been found
to produce more of a deficit in spatial navigation. To investigate whether
this dissociation extends to configural-relational learning, we tested rats
with dorsal or ventral HPC lesions in a modified version of the Morris wat
er task and in a discriminative context-conditioning paradigm. Results indi
cated that dorsal HPC lesions were more efficient in impairing performance
in the spatial navigation task but that ventral HPC lesions also had some e
ffect. However, no differences between groups were found in the nonspatial
context-conditioning task. Both lesion groups acquired discriminative freez
ing at a rate identical to that of the controls, but lesioned animals could
not acquire preference for the safe environment even after three pairings
with shock. Thus, comparison of multiple cues with different emotional vale
nce requires integration along the septotemporal axis of the HPC. Reviewing
previous studies, we conclude that although the dorsal HPC pole is more ef
ficient than the ventral in supporting spatial navigation, the dissociation
is not absolute. We also hypothesize that physiological activity along the
longitudinal axis of the HPC might have particular behavioral relevance. T
heoretical implications of this hypothesis are considered.