Abstract
In Experiment 1, rats with parietal, temporal, or frontopolar neocortex ablations and nonoperated controls were trained on seven spatial reversals. The animals with parietal association cortex damage were found to be deficient on this task compared to all other groups. In Experiment 2, rats with either temporal or striate neocortical ablations or subcortical lesions of the lateroposterior thalamic nucleus and nonoperated controls were trained on a black-white reversal task. The rats with temporal damage committed significantly more errors than all other groups. These results together with those of previous research suggest that a dissociation exists between the effects of parietal and temporal association cortex ablations on reversal learning in the rat. It was suggested that the visual functions of the temporal association cortex might be mediated by connections with either the striate cortex or the lateroposterior thalamic nucleus.
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