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Springer (part of Springer Nature), Molecular Neurobiology, 2-4(5), p. 351-354

DOI: 10.1007/bf02935557

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Brain metabolic activity associated with long-term memory consolidation

Journal article published in 1991 by G. L. Sedman, B. S. O'Dowd, N. Rickard ORCID, M. E. Gibbs, K. T. Ng
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

The use of day-old chickens trained on a single-trial passive avoidance task provides a useful paradigm for investigations into cellular mechanisms underlying memory formation. Pharmacological intervention studies indicate that there are three temporally identifiable stages of memory processing leading to the consolidation of information for this task. These stages, designated as short-term (STM; up to 15 min), intermediate-term (ITM; 15-55 min), and long-term (LTM; more than 55 min) memory, have been found to be sequentially dependent (Ng and Gibbs, 1989). In addition, ITM appears to consist of two physiologically distinguishable phases, A and B. Evidence in this laboratory suggests that the crossover between these ITM phases (at 30 min after training) represents a critical time-point for the triggering of LTM.