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Elsevier, Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry, (55), p. 80-86, 2014

DOI: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2014.03.010

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A new model to study visual attention in zebrafish

Journal article published in 2014 by Daniela Braida, Luisa Ponzoni, Roberta Martucci, Mariaelvina Sala ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

The major part of cognitive tasks applied to zebrafish have not fully assessed their attentional ability, a process by which the nervous system learns, organizes sensory input and generates coordinated behaviour. In an attempt to maximize the value of zebrafish as an animal model of cognition, we tested the possibility to apply a modified version of novel object recognition test named virtual object recognition test (VORT) using 2D geometrical shapes (square, triangle, circle, cross, etc.) on two iPod 3.5-inch widescreen displays, located on two opposite walls of the water tank. Each fish was subjected to a familiarisation trial (T1), and after different time delays (from 5min to 96h) to a novel shape recognition trial (T2). A progressive decrease, across time, of memory performance, in terms of mean discrimination index and mean exploration time, was shown. The predictive validity was tested using cholinergic drugs. Nicotine (0.02mg/kg intraperitoneally, IP) significantly increased, while scopolamine (0.025mg/kg IP) and mecamylamine decreased, mean discrimination index. Zebrafish discriminated different movements (vertical, horizontal, oblique) and the discrimination index increased significantly when moving poorly discriminated shapes were presented, thus increasing visual attention. Taken together these findings demonstrate that VORT is a viable, fast and useful model to evaluate sustained attention in zebrafish and for predicting the efficacy of pharmacotherapies for cognitive disorders.