Channelpedia

PubMed 23649884


Referenced in: none

Automatically associated channels: TASK1



Title: NMDA receptor antagonists distort visual grouping in rats performing a modified two-choice visual discrimination task.

Authors: Katja Clarissa Ward, Halima Zainab Khattak, Louise Richardson, Jonathan Loon Choon Lee, Martin Vreugdenhil

Journal, date & volume: Psychopharmacology (Berl.), 2013 Oct , 229, 627-37

PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23649884


Abstract
Visual perception is impaired during pathological psychosis, which can be mimicked by NMDA receptor antagonists. However, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood, partly due to limits of current rodent models for visual integration.The objectives of the study are (1) to develop a rodent task that can differentiate between effects on perception and nonspecific effects on task performance and (2) to test whether NMDA receptor antagonists affect visual perception in rats.We used an adaptation of Glass patterns to assess visual grouping in rats using a two-choice visual discrimination task in an infrared touch screen conditioning chamber. After rats learned to discriminate between a radial and a concentric bipole pattern, the ability to discriminate between these patterns was tested at various levels of distortion and a psychometric function was fit to obtain the maximum task performance and signal level needed for half-maximum performance.NMDA receptor antagonists ketamine and phencyclidine at low doses increased the signal quality needed to discriminate between the visual patterns, without affecting the ability to discriminate between undistorted images. At higher doses, the ability to perform the task even with undistorted images was impaired, which was associated with stereotypic behaviour and increased impulsivity.The Glass pattern-based visual grouping task is able to differentiate the effect of psychotomimetic NMDA receptor antagonists on visual perception from the effects on motor and memory functions. The half-maximum performance signal level allows quantification of cognitive psychosis in rodents, which can be translated to human psychometric functions and can be used in the development of more effective treatments.