Costs of acquiring and forgetting information affect spatial memory and its susceptibility to interference

Publication Type:
Journal Article
Year of Publication:
2004
Authors:
Kirsty Laughlin, Michael Mendl
Publication/Journal:
Animal Behaviour
Keywords:
,
ISBN:
0003-3472
Abstract:

Acquiring and storing information in memory is constrained by the limited capacity of attentional and short-term memory systems. Therefore, processes that prioritize information for storage in memory according to its survival value to the organism are likely to have evolved. Information incurring energy or time costs to acquire, or if forgotten, should be stored and retrieved more effectively than information that is less costly to acquire or forget. We manipulated the costs of acquiring and forgetting information in an eight-arm radial maze memory task for pigs, Sus scrofa, by placing ropes at the entrance to arms, which pigs had to walk over incurring an extra 2-3-s time cost for each arm entry. Each day each pig (N=16) made a sampling visit to the maze to find food in four arms, followed by a 10-min retention interval, and a recall visit in which visits to the four previously empty arms were reinforced. Baited arms were varied daily. Pigs were divided into four groups and exposed to ropes (costs) either during sampling only, recall only, both or neither. Exposure to costs during sampling visits decreased errors during recall visits. This was probably the result of enhanced attention to and encoding of information during sampling. When all groups were performing equally well, retroactive interference treatments revealed hidden differences between them. Groups experiencing costs during recall tests were least susceptible to interference effects, probably because of more considered use of retrieved information. Both memory encoding and retrieval processes may thus be modulated by even small costs of obtaining or forgetting information.

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