Abstract

The role of the medial prefrontal cortex (PFC) in goal-directed behavior was examined in rats with aspiration lesions. In Experiment 1, PFC lesions resulted in an impaired ability to relearn the location of a behaviorally defined goal arm of a plus-maze after it was moved from an initially fixed position. Lesioned rats also exhibited a significantly greater degree of perseveration compared with control animals. Experiment 2 was an object exploration task in which rats had to respond to a change in the layout of the environment. PFC-lesioned rats performed identically to controls, therefore demonstrating that the deficits observed in Experiment 1 did not result from a deficit in the ability to explore the environment. The results are discussed in terms of several competing, but not mutually exclusive explanations of the role of the PFC in navigation and spatial representation.

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