Abstract

Infants tend to forget experiences much more rapidly than older individuals, a phenomenon referred to as infantile amnesia. This robust, cross-species phenomenon is commonly used to examine memory development. However, in this set of experiments, we examined the novel hypothesis that the expression of infantile amnesia is related to resilience/vulnerability. We conditioned infant rats to associate a white noise with shock. Animals were tested for memory of the association ~1 week later. We found that infants that expressed better memory of the aversive association emitted more vocalizations (indicative of higher levels of distress) when separated from their mother earlier in infancy (Experiment 1). Better expression of memory in infancy also predicted higher levels of conditioned fear (Experiment 2) and anxiety-like behavior (in a light-dark box; Experiment 3) in adulthood. Furthermore, probiotic-treatment administered early in development reduced anxiety-like behavior in animals that exhibited good expression of memory for an aversive association learnt in infancy (Experiment 4). However, the same treatment was ineffective if administered in adulthood. Taken together, these results suggest that individual differences in infants’ memory for an aversive association predict anxiety-like behavior throughout development, and that early administration of probiotics can reduce anxiety-like behavior in “at-risk” animals.

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