Crossed unilateral lesions of the medial forebrain bundle and either inferior temporal or frontal cortex impair object-reward association learning inRhesus monkeys
A. Easton et D. Gaffan, Crossed unilateral lesions of the medial forebrain bundle and either inferior temporal or frontal cortex impair object-reward association learning inRhesus monkeys, NEUROPSYCHO, 39(1), 2001, pp. 71-82
In an accompanying paper we showed that combined transection of the fornix,
amygdala and temporal stem in monkeys produced dense amnesia, including an
impairment in visual object-reward association learning. We proposed that
this combined surgical section had its effect by isolating temporal cortex
from the ascending projections of the basal forebrain and midbrain structur
es. To test this hypothesis, in the present experiment we disconnected the
inferior temporal cortex from these basal forebrain and midbrain structures
: while sparing cortical white matter, by crossed unilateral lesions of the
medial forebrain bundle in one hemisphere and inferior temporal cortex in
the opposite hemisphere. The aim of the medial forebrain bundle lesion was
to section axons of cells, both those that project to the cortex via the me
dial forebrain bundle, and those which control the activity of these same s
tructures. A single unilateral lesion alone had no effect on the ability to
learn and remember visual object-reward associations, but the crossed unil
ateral lesions produced an impairment in this task which was equal in sever
ity to the impairment seen earlier after bilateral section of the fornix, a
mygdala and temporal stem. The impairment was not an effect of interrupting
fibres to the cortex from the ventromedial hypothalamus, or of unilateral
sensory neglect. This supports the hypothesis that these midbrain and basal
forebrain afferents to the inferior temporal cortex are important for new
visual learning. Furthermore, an impairment of equal severity was demonstra
ted in a separate group of animals that received crossed unilateral lesions
of the medial forebrain bundle in one hemisphere and of the frontal cortex
in the opposite hemisphere. We propose that the frontal cortex acts to mod
ulate basal forebrain activity which in turn reinforces object representati
ons in the inferior temporal cortex during learning. (C) 2000 Elsevier Scie
nce Ltd. All rights reserved.