Endogenous anxiety and stress responses in water maze and Barnes maze spatial memory tasks

FE Harrison, AH Hosseini, MP McDonald - Behavioural brain research, 2009 - Elsevier
FE Harrison, AH Hosseini, MP McDonald
Behavioural brain research, 2009Elsevier
The effects of abnormally high or low stress on learning are well established. The Barnes
maze and Morris water maze are two commonly used tests of spatial memory, of which the
water maze is considered more stressful; however, until now this has not been demonstrated
empirically. In the present study, mice matched for performance on commonly used anxiety
tasks were trained on either the Barnes maze or water maze or received no cognitive testing.
Water-maze training induced greater increases in plasma corticosterone than did Barnes …
The effects of abnormally high or low stress on learning are well established. The Barnes maze and Morris water maze are two commonly used tests of spatial memory, of which the water maze is considered more stressful; however, until now this has not been demonstrated empirically. In the present study, mice matched for performance on commonly used anxiety tasks were trained on either the Barnes maze or water maze or received no cognitive testing. Water-maze training induced greater increases in plasma corticosterone than did Barnes maze training, assessed 30min after the final session. Importantly, spatial learning was inversely correlated with corticosterone levels in the water maze but not the Barnes maze, suggesting that performance on the water maze may be more affected by test-induced stress even within wild-type subjects of the same age and gender. These findings are important when considering the appropriate cognitive tasks for any experiment in which stress responses may differ systematically across groups.
Elsevier