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Volume 17, Number 22,
Issue of November 15, 1997
Unilateral Lesions of the Dorsal Striatum in Rats Disrupt
Responding in Egocentric Space
Peter J. Brasted1,
Trevor Humby1,
Stephen B. Dunnett1, 2, and
Trevor W. Robbins1, 2
1 Medical Research Council Cambridge Centre for Brain
Repair and 2 Department of Experimental Psychology,
University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 2PY, United Kingdom
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Rats were trained in a specially designed, multichoice operant
chamber on a visual choice reaction time task designed to assess performance on each side of the rat's body. The task required animals
to sustain a nose poke in a central hole, until a brief light stimulus
was presented in either of two holes that were located on the same side
of the box. Once the rats were trained to perform the task to both
sides independently they received unilateral injections of quinolinic
acid into the dorsal striatum.
Postoperatively, lesioned animals were impaired when performing the
task on the side contralateral to the lesion. The time taken to
initiate contralateral responses was increased. Contralateral responses
were also exclusively biased toward the nearer of the two response
locations, regardless of the location of the stimulus. This was
interpreted as a specific impairment in generating responses in
contralateral space. In contrast, no comparable deficit was seen when
the animals performed the task on the side ipsilateral to the lesion.
Additional postoperative challenges, in which response options were
presented bilaterally, showed this response deficit to be defined in
egocentric coordinates, with the severest response deficits for the
most contralateral locations.
Key words:
striatum;
neglect;
rat;
excitotoxin;
movement;
egocentric;
Huntington's disease
INTRODUCTION
Unilateral lesions of the
dorsal striatum in rats impair responses to contralateral stimuli
(Mittleman et al., 1988 , Brown and Robbins 1989b , Mayer et al., 1992 ).
Furthermore, because these studies dissociated the locations of the
cued response from the cue itself, this "striatal neglect" is
believed to reflect the specific inability to produce a motor response
to the side contralateral to the lesion. This is consistent with
movement disorders that involve striatal degeneration, such as
Huntington's disease (Harper, 1996 ).
Different manifestations of neglect have been shown both experimentally
and clinically. As well as an attentional or representational neglect
(Bisiach and Luzzatti, 1978 ; Bisiach et al., 1979 ; Posner et al.,
1984 ), an "intentional" or output neglect has been demonstrated after damage to anterior cortical or basal ganglia structures, which is
characterized by a hemispatial hypokinesia (Watson et al., 1978 ;
Heilman et al., 1985 ; Tegner and Levander, 1991 ). The contralateral
deficit can also be defined in various coordinate systems. Patients can
exhibit a viewer-centered neglect, as defined by the subjects' midline
(Farah et al., 1990 ; Karnath et al., 1991 ), or an object- or
environment-centered neglect, which is defined by external referents
(Ladavas 1987 ; Caramazza and Hills, 1990; Driver and Halligan, 1991 ).
It has been suggested, however, that not all aspects of contralateral
space are necessarily affected. For example, subjects can show neglect
in immediately adjacent (peripersonal) space but operate normally in
far, extrapersonal space (Bisiach et al., 1986 ; Halligan and Marshall
1991 ). The reverse pattern of deficits has also been shown (Shelton et
al., 1990 ; Cowey et al., 1994 ).
In a detailed analysis of rats with unilateral striatal dopamine
depletion, Brown and Robbins (1989a) designed a visual reaction time
paradigm to determine whether the impairment in initiating contralateral movement (Dunnett and Björklund, 1983 ; Carli et al., 1985 , 1989 ) reflected a deficit that was defined in egocentric or
allocentric (i.e., externally based) coordinates. The authors demonstrated that animals with dopamine-depleting lesions in the contralateral striatum biased their responding toward the nearer of two
response locations, whereas ipsilaterally lesioned animals were
unaffected in their responding. This was interpreted as a disruption of
egocentrically organized response space.
The neglect of contralateral space after unilateral excitotoxic lesions
of intrinsic striatal neurons has yet to be fully quantified. This
study sought to address this, with a paradigm that required animals to
respond in one of two locations that were both located in the same
spatial hemifield (as in the study by Brown and Robbins 1989a ).
However, in this study, animals were trained to perform the task to
both sides of space, separately. This approach has two advantages.
First, it provides a comparison between the two sides within the same
group of animals. Second, it allows any postoperative impairment to be
probed with bilaterally presented response options. It is thus possible
to ascertain whether neglect after unilateral striatal lesions is
spatially uniform, or whether it reflects an inability to respond to
relatively contralateral locations.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects
Eighteen male Lister Hooded rats (Charles River,
Cambridge, UK) were used in this experiment. They were housed in groups
of two to four. They were kept on a 12 hr light/dark cycle (lights on
9.30 P.M.), and were run in the dark half of the cycle. Their food
intake was restricted to 15-17 gm of laboratory chow at the end of
each day to maintain ~90% of free-feeding body weight. Water was
available ad libitum. Subjects weighed ~220 gm at the start of testing and weighed 350-450 gm at the time of surgery. Experiments were conducted in accordance with the regulations laid down
in the United Kingdom Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act, 1986.
Apparatus
Testing was conducted in the nine-hole box apparatus (Paul Fray
Ltd., Cambridge, UK). Each box measured 26 × 26 × 26 cm
with an arc of nine contiguous apertures set into the curved rear wall. Each aperture was 2.5 cm square and 5 cm deep. Light-emitting diodes at
the rear of each hole could be turned on and off automatically to
provide visual cues specific to each hole. Vertical photocell beams at
the front of each hole allowed the recording of response latencies and
locations. In the opposite panel of the chamber was a food hopper
behind a hinged Plexiglas panel to which food pellets (45 mg; Noyes)
could be dispensed. A light in the hopper came on when food was
delivered and was extinguished when the food was collected. A house
light in the center of the ceiling was capable of illuminating the
entire chamber, although the chamber was not illuminated during normal
trials. Each chamber was fitted within a sound-attenuating box, which
in turn was equipped with an extractor fan, which provides a constant
low level of background noise. An Acorn A5000 microcomputer running the
Arachnid operating system (Paul Fray Ltd.) controlled, and recorded
data from, each box independently.
In this study, there were two types of hole configuration, each of
which utilized three apertures, with the other holes occluded with
metal caps. For the first configuration, only the center hole and the
two holes immediately to its left were exposed. For the second
configuration, only the center hole and the two holes immediately to
its right were open (Fig. 1). A more
detailed description of the apparatus can be found elsewhere (Robbins
et al., 1993 ).
Fig. 1.
Task requirements when response holes are
configured to the left (A) and right
(B). The rat must sustain a nose poke in the center hole. After a variable period (delay, 50, 250, 450, or 650 msec)
a brief light flash appeared in one of the two holes to the side of the
rat. The rat then had to withdraw its nose from the center and poke its
nose into the same hole in which the light had appeared to obtain food
reward.
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
Behavioral test procedures
Training. Subjects were placed on a restricted food
regimen, and 24 hr later they were exposed to the operant chamber. This habituation period lasted 30 min, during which animals had access to
food pellets that had been placed in the food hopper. All the stimulus
holes were capped, and no lights were on during this session. The
following day, a training program commenced, whereby only the center
hole was exposed. A nose poke in the lit hole extinguished the stimulus
light and resulted in a pellet being delivered to the hopper. The light
situated in the hopper was lit until the animal entered the hopper.
Once the animal had learned to do this, collecting 50 pellets in a 30 min session, it began the next training program. In this second
program, the center hole and two response holes either immediately to
the left or the right were exposed. The response holes that were used
changed each day. The animal was required to nose poke in the center
hole as before. This extinguished the center light and turned on the stimulus light in the response hole. This light remained on until the
animal produced a nose poke in the illuminated response hole. The
stimulus light was then extinguished, and food was delivered to the
hopper as before. Once an animal learned this aspect of the task, it
progressed to the complete task paradigm described below. The task
parameters of delay, stimulus duration, and maximum response time were
introduced at this stage, and these were gradually changed as
performance improved.
Task paradigm. The lateralized visual reaction time task is
illustrated schematically in Figure 1. Animals were trained to perform
the task for each of the two configurations of holes separately, on
alternate days, the task for each configuration differing only in the
side (left or right) to which it was performed. These two arrangements
are referred to as the ipsilateral and contralateral configurations and
are named with respect to the side on which an animal was lesioned
after training. At the start of each trial only the center light was
on. All other lights, including the house lights, were off. The rat was
required to poke its nose into the center hole. This extinguished the
center light. The rat then had to sustain this nose poke for a variable
period (delay) until a brief unpredictable visual stimulus (maximum 0.3 sec) appeared in one of the two side holes. There were four delays used
(50, 250, 450, and 650 msec), an equal number of which were presented
pseudorandomly during a session. Once the lateralized visual stimulus
had occurred, the rat had to withdraw its nose from the center hole
(which extinguished the stimulus light if it was still on) and to move
and poke its nose into the side hole in which the light had been
presented. A correct response was rewarded with the delivery of a food
pellet into the food hopper. An incorrect response was punished by the
house light being turned on for 1 sec (timeout) and no food being
presented. The animal was also punished with a timeout if it withdrew
its nose from the center hole before the lateralized stimulus was
presented (premature response) or if no response was made to the
lateralized stimulus within 5 sec (late response). The next trial was
initiated when the animal pushed the panel of the food hopper. A
response into the center hole in response to the stimulus presentation was also punished, but there were few such responses under any conditions and are therefore not reported here.
Reaction time was defined and recorded as the latency to initiate the
response (i.e., to withdraw the nose from the center hole) after the
presentation of the lateralized light stimulus. Movement time was
defined and recorded as the latency to produce a nose poke response
after the point in time of withdrawal from the center hole. The trial
outcome and response location for each trial were also recorded.
Testing procedure. Each session consisted of 80 trials (10 trials at each of the four delays for each response location) and was
terminated if not completed after 1 hr. Every subject ran two sessions
each day, with the response holes on the same side for both sessions.
The side of the response holes alternated each day. Animals were judged
to have learned the task once their performance, as measured by the
percentage of correct trials, had reached an asymptotic level for each
side. Data from the 20 sessions, 10 to each side, that were performed
before surgery were used for preoperative baseline measures. Animals
were then assigned to receive lesion or sham surgery, and the groups
were matched with respect to the percentage of correct trials achieved.
The side of lesion was also determined in this way, with all rats
receiving unilateral surgery opposite their most accurate side. Testing resumed 6 d after surgery for an additional 10 d.
Postoperative measures were obtained from the 20 sessions, 10 to each
side, that were performed after surgery. An additional two sessions, one to each side, were run about 4 weeks after surgery, to investigate the stability of the lesion deficit over time.
Surgery
Ten animals received excitotoxic lesions, and eight received
identical surgery with PBS. The rats were anesthetized with 0.25-0.3 ml/kg Hypnorm injected intramuscularly and 0.25 ml of Diazepam injected
intraperitoneally and were placed in a stereotaxic frame. Unilateral
striatal lesions were given by injecting 2 × 0.5 µl of 0.09 M quinolinic acid into two sites in the striatum. The toxin
was delivered by a 30 gauge cannula, attached by polyethylene tubing to
a 10 µl glass syringe, which was mounted on a microdrive pump.
Coordinates were anterior (A), 0.0 mm; lateral (L), 3.6 mm; and ventral
(V), 4.5 mm; and A, 1.2 mm; L, 2.8 mm; and V, 4.5 mm, with the nose
bar set at 2.3 mm (Paxinos and Watson, 1986 ). Measurements were taken
anterior to bregma, lateral to the midline, and dorsal to dura. Each
infusion lasted for 4 min, with an additional 5 min allowed for
diffusion before the cannula being withdrawn. One animal in the lesion
group died postoperatively.
Postoperative challenges
Extinction task and no stimuli condition. About 1 month postoperatively, animals were tested with probe trials, which
examined the effect of presenting both stimuli simultaneously, a test
that can be considered an analog to the "extinction" task used in
assessing neglect patients clinically (Bender, 1952 ; Valenstein and
Heilman, 1981 ). Trials in which no stimuli were presented were also
given. Animals were tested for one session on each of the two response hole configurations on separate days. Each session consisted of 80 trials and comprised three interspersed trial types: (1) control trials, in which only one stimulus light was presented; (2) trials in
which both stimulus lights were presented; and (3) trials in which no
stimulus lights were presented. There were 40 control trials, and 20 trials each in the other two conditions. When both stimuli were
presented, a response in either hole was rewarded. When neither
stimulus was presented, a delay period of 0 msec was used, and a
response in either hole was punished. The primary dependent variable of
interest for these challenges was the near hole response bias.
Bilaterally configured response options. To assess
performance when the response holes were not adjacent, animals were
also exposed postoperatively to four other hole configurations, in addition to the ipsilateral and contralateral configurations, which
have already been described. Each configuration still consisted of a
center hole and two of the previously used response holes, with animals
still being appetitively reinforced for responding in a hole where a
light occurred. These additional response hole arrangements were termed
as follows: near configuration (near ipsilateral and near contralateral
holes); far configuration (far ipsilateral and far contralateral
holes); near ipsilateral/far contralateral configuration; and near
contralateral/far ipsilateral configuration. Animals performed one
session for each of these bilaterally configured response options, with
the extinction task described above used on each occasion.
These bilateral configurations allowed for the testing of two
hypotheses. First, it was possible to examine further the concept of
egocentric response coding. Two of the configurations (near ipsilateral/far contralateral configuration and near contralateral/far ipsilateral) maintain the same distance between the response holes but
vary their position relative to the center hole and thus the body axis.
A difference in bias in these two conditions would be expected only if
response space is egocentrically coded. Second, responding in near and
far space could be examined separately using the "near/near" and
"far/far" configurations. This allowed for the analysis of a
potential dissociation between near and far space by assessing whether
the lesion produced similar deficits in the two conditions,
particularly when competition between the two responses was greatest in
the extinction condition.
Behavioral measures
The following behavioral measures were subjected to analysis:
(1) Accuracy (correct responses as a percentage of correct and incorrect trials). (2) Response bias; for the ipsilateral and contralateral configurations, a near hole bias was calculated. This was
expressed as the number of correct and incorrect responses made to the
near hole as a percentage of the total number of correct and incorrect
responses made to either hole. Thus, a bias score of 50% represents no
bias, >50% denotes a bias toward the near hole, and <50% denotes a
bias in responding toward the far hole. For the four hole
configurations that are introduced postoperatively, an ipsilateral bias
score is calculated in a similar manner. Therefore a bias score of
>50% denotes an ipsilateral bias, and <50% denotes a contralateral
bias. (3) Premature responses (as a percentage of all attempted
trials). (4) Late responses (as a percentage of all attempted trials).
(5) Reaction time for correct responses. (6) Movement time for correct
responses.
Treatment of data
Data were collected automatically for every trial, for
each box. Data for each animal were then collated over all relevant sessions preoperatively and postoperatively. Based on an exploratory analysis of the reaction time distribution, a reaction time limit of
>70 msec was imposed when processing the data; trials with reaction
times of <70 msec were classified as premature responses. When
averaging latencies, a geometric mean was calculated for each rat for
each treatment combination. This transformation results in outlying
data points having less influence than they do on an arithmetic mean.
Overall means of reaction and movement times represent the arithmetic
average of the geometric means of individual rats.
The reaction and movement time data collected for the ipsilateral and
contralateral configurations were subject to a repeated measures ANOVA
with the five factors: group, surgery, side, delay, and distance (near
or far). The percentages of premature and late responses were analyzed
in a similar manner but without the factor of delay. The bias data were
transformed with an arc sin function, and the transformed scores were
analyzed with a repeated measures ANOVA using the factors surgery,
side, and group. The Genstat 5 for Windows (release 3.2) statistical
package (Experimental Research Station, Rothampsted, UK) was used for
all statistical computations. Post hoc tests were based on
Sidak's comparisons (Rohlf and Jokal, 1995 ) as appropriate.
Histological analysis
Once behavioral testing had been completed, the rats were
anesthetized with 1 ml of Euthatal and were transcardially perfused with 100 ml of PBS, followed by 250 ml of 10% formalin. The brains were removed, post-fixed in 10% formalin for 24 hr, and then removed in 30% sucrose in PBS until they sank. The tissue was sectioned serially at 60 µm on a freezing microtome. Two parallel 1:6 series were mounted on slides. One series was stained with cresyl violet, and
the other for acetylcholinesterase activity.
A SeeScan (Cambridge, UK) image analysis system was used to quantify
striatal and ventricular volumes for both the lesion and intact side.
The histological measures of striatal volume and ventricular volume
were calculated as a percentage of the volume for the intact side for
each animal. Sections were photographed digitally, and Adobe Photoshop
3.0 for Windows was used in preparing photomicrographs.
RESULTS
Histological analysis
Infusions of quinolinic acid resulted in discrete lesions of the
dorsal striatum. The lesioned area was distinguished by profound neuronal loss within the dorsal striatum, a reduction in striatal volume, and a corresponding increase in size of the lateral ventricles. The acetylcholinesterase stain showed a reduction in enzyme activity for areas that coincided to areas of cell loss shown by the Nissl stain
(Fig. 2). There was no evidence of damage
to adjacent structures such as the globus pallidus, nor did cell loss
extended to the ventral striatum. There was slight cortical damage in
one animal in the lesion group.
Fig. 2.
Photomicrographs illustrating the effects of
unilateral injections into the dorsal striatum of buffer solution
(A, C) and 0.09 M quinolinic acid (B,
D). The lesion produced extensive neuronal loss, as shown by
the Nissl stain (B). The
acetylcholinesterase-stained section exhibits a marked decrease in
enzyme activity over a similar area (D). Scale
bar, 1 mm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (83K GIF file)]
The volume of the lesioned striatum, as a percentage of an animal's
intact striatum, was 76.1% for animals that received injections of
quinolinic acid. This reduction was not seen for sham-lesioned animals
(107.1%), as indicated by an independent t test
(t = 3.04; p < 0.05). There was a
corresponding increase in ventricular volume on the lesioned side for
excitotoxically lesioned animals when compared with the sham-operated
group (lesion, 183.3%; sham, 85.4%; t = 4.57;
p < 0.01).
Accuracy
Preoperatively, the accuracy of the two groups was 77.6% (lesion)
and 78.1% (sham). After surgery the lesion group responded less
accurately (58.3%), but the sham group (77.2%) did not. (group × surgery, F(1,15) = 22.89; p < 0.01). This decline in accuracy for the lesion group was not
lateralized (group × surgery × sides, F(1,15) = 2.49; NS), but lesioned animals tended to be less accurate on the
contralateral side (ipsilateral, 63.5%; contralateral, 53.0). However,
this inaccuracy is associated with, and probably determined by, large
changes in response bias.
Bias
Preoperative and postoperative bias scores are shown in Figure
3. Before surgery, all rats showed a
slight near hole response bias (overall untransformed bias score,
58.1%). Postoperatively, lesioned rats directed virtually all
contralateral responses toward the near hole (untransformed bias score,
99.3%). There was a less marked, nonsignificant, increase in bias
shown by lesioned rats when responding toward the ipsilateral side hole
(untransformed bias score, 74.8%), as revealed by a significant
three-way interaction between group, surgery, and side
(F(1,15) = 13.29; p < 0.01). Sham animals had bias scores of 57.7% (ipsilateral) and 60.7% (contralateral) after surgery.
Fig. 3.
Response bias to the near hole, for both groups
when performing the task to the side ipsilateral
(IPSI) or contralateral (CONTRA) to the lesion [% NEAR BIAS = (all correct and
incorrect responses to the near hole)/(correct and incorrect responses
to both holes)]. Before the lesion, both groups displayed a mild bias
toward the near hole. Postoperatively, lesioned animals directed
virtually all contralateral responses toward the nearer of the two
holes. They also showed a less marked increase in near hole bias on the ipsilateral side. Bars indicate the SEM of individual animal
means.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
Premature responses
The percentages of premature responses made preoperatively were
19.38% (lesion) and 20.68% (sham). Postoperatively, more premature responses were produced by lesion group (33.3%) than by sham animals (21.61%) (group × surgery, F(1,15) = 18.11; p < 0.01). This effect was not specific to
either side (group × surgery × side,
F(1,15) = 1.41; NS), the lesion group responding
prematurely 31.51% (ipsilaterally) and 35.17% (contralaterally) in
postoperative sessions.
Late responses
There were few late responses before surgery (lesion, 0.14%;
sham, 0.45%). Lesioned animals produced more late responses after surgery (lesion, 1.12%; sham, 0.16%; group × surgery,
F(1,15) = 20.76; p < 0.001),
and this tended to be the case specifically for responding on the
contralateral side (group × surgery × side, F(1,15) = 6.66; p < 0.05).
However, there were very few responses of this kind (the average number
of such responses never exceeded 2% per session, for any
condition).
Reaction time
Figure 4 shows the reaction time
performance, for correct trials only, of both groups before and after
surgery. There were no differences between the groups preoperatively,
with reaction times decreasing as a function of increasing delay period
for all animals (delay, F(3,45) = 19.72;
p < 0.001). There was no difference in the time taken
to initiate responses to either hole on either side.
Fig. 4.
Preoperative and postoperative reaction times for
correct responses, plotted as a function of delay, for each group. The
lesion group showed no postoperative increase in reaction time when
responding ipsilaterally. However, it did show an increase in
initiating responses, which were contralateral to the side of the
lesion, at each delay.
[View Larger Version of this Image (32K GIF file)]
The lesion had no effect on the reaction times for responses made
toward the ipsilateral side. However, the lesioned group did show an
increase in reaction times for contralateral responses. (group × surgery × side, F(1,15) = 6.16;
p < 0.05). Lesioned animals were, on average, 60 msec
slower to initiate responses to the contralateral near hole (sham, 187;
lesion, 247 msec). The lesion group still showed a speeding of reaction
time as the delay period increased, although the four-way interaction
of group × surgery × side × delay suggested that this
contralateral increase in lesioned animals was delay-dependent
(F(3,45) = 3.35; p < 0.05).
Lesioned animals did not complete sufficient trials to the
contralateral far hole to enable a full factorial analysis of reaction
times.
Movement time
Figure 5 shows the movement time
performance for both groups before and after surgery. There was no
difference between the groups preoperatively in the time taken to
complete a response. Latencies were consistently greater for responses
to the far holes (distance, F(1,15) = 196.29;
p < 0.001), and the delay period had no influence on
movement times.
Fig. 5.
Preoperative and postoperative movement times for
correct responses, plotted as a function of delay, for each group. The
lesion group showed no lateralized impairments after surgery, although it took slightly longer to complete far hole responses.
[View Larger Version of this Image (35K GIF file)]
After surgery, there were no lateralized impairments in lesioned
animals (group × surgery × side;
F(1,15) < 1.00; NS). However, the lesion group
was marginally slower to complete a response to the far hole, although
on the ipsilateral side (group × surgery × distance,
F(1,15) = 7.45; p < 0.05).
Effect of presenting neither or both stimulus lights (extinction)
for ipsilateral and contralateral hole configurations
As shown in Figure 6, neither the
extinction test nor the absence of stimulus lights affected the
response bias of the lesion or sham animals when the response holes
were presented unilaterally (stimulus, F(2,30) = 1.49; NS).
Fig. 6.
Near hole response bias for ipsilateral
(IPSI) and contralateral (CONTRA)
configurations for postoperative sessions when trials consisting of
both stimuli (extinction) and no stimuli were presented. On the
contralateral side, lesioned animals still responded virtually exclusively to the far hole in all stimulus conditions. Ipsilaterally, the lesion group performed as shams. BASE, Either light;
DBLE, both lights; NONE, no lights
presented. The hole configurations are shown above each
graph, as they would appear for an animal lesioned on the
left.
[View Larger Version of this Image (27K GIF file)]
Ipsilaterally, the stimulus condition had little effect on either the
lesion or sham group. Neither group showed an increase in response bias
when both ipsilateral holes were lit, and both showed only a slight
increase in bias toward the near hole when no light was presented.
Contralaterally, the lesioned animals continued to show a strong near
hole bias when responding (group × holes,
F(1,15) = 30.99; p < 0.01) and
did so regardless of whether either, both, or none of the response
holes were cued (group × holes × stimulus, F(2,30) = 0.89; NS).
Effect of bilateral response hole configurations
When the bilateral response hole configurations were used, animals
displayed a significantly greater bias toward the ipsilateral hole for
two of the configurations: far ipsilateral/far contralateral and near
ipsilateral/far contralateral (hole, F(3,45) = 5.16; p < 0.01). This was marginally affected by the
dorsal striatal lesion, the interaction between group and hole
bordering on significance (F(3,45) = 2.66;
p = 0.059). Figure 7
illustrates how lesioned rats biased their responding toward the
ipsilateral side in these two conditions, both of which include the far
contralateral hole.
Fig. 7.
Ipsilateral response bias for the four bilateral
hole configurations, for postoperative sessions when trials consisting
of both stimuli (extinction) and no stimuli were presented. Lesioned animals tended to bias their responding to the ipsilateral
(IPSI) side when the far contralateral
(CONTRA) hole was one of the holes used. The extinction
task also tended to increase the ipsilateral bias in lesioned animals.
However, lesioned animals showed no bias in those conditions in which
no stimulus was presented. BASE, Either light;
DBLE, both lights; NONE, no lights
presented [% IPSILATERAL BIAS = (all correct and
incorrect responses to the ipsilateral hole)/(correct and incorrect
responses to both holes)]. The hole configurations are shown
above each graph, as they would appear for an animal
lesioned on the left.
[View Larger Version of this Image (37K GIF file)]
The extinction test brought out significant differences in performance
between the two groups in these bilateral response hole configurations
(stimulus × group, F(2,30) = 4.07;
p < 0.05). The effect of presenting both stimuli was
to increase the bias toward the ipsilateral hole in the lesion group
compared with control animals (Sidak t(3,30) = 3.63; p < 0.01). When no response was cued, lesioned
animals showed no increase in response bias and were no different than
control animals in this regard (Sidak t(3,30) = 0.13; NS).
Lack of recovery for response bias
Response bias was analyzed for contralateral sessions, which were
run 6-7 d and 4 weeks after surgery, to see whether there was any
reduction in the behavioral deficit over time. Bias scores in lesioned
animals were unchanged over time (time × group,
F(1,15) = 1.74; NS). The untransformed bias
scores for lesioned animals were 92.6% and 93.7% for the premature
and late sessions, respectively.
Correct versus incorrect reaction times for lesioned animals
To investigate whether lesioned animals were able to discriminate
between the two stimuli in the visual field contralateral to the
lesion, correct and incorrect reaction times for responses to the near
hole were examined and compared with the pattern seen ipsilaterally in
the lesion group. On the ipsilateral side, correct responses to the
near hole were initiated faster than incorrect responses to the near
hole, at all delays. Despite the overall slowing of reaction times for
contralateral responses, this difference was also seen on the
contralateral side (trial outcome × side, F(1,8) = 2.56; NS).
DISCUSSION
This study has used a novel paradigm for examining a long-lasting
form of neglect in the rat after dorsal striatal damage, which helps us
understand the spatial nature of the neglect and the normal mode of
functioning of the intact striatum.
It is unlikely for a number of reasons that the contralateral deficits
seen in this study are primarily sensory in nature. Previous studies
that dissociated stimulus and response locations demonstrated that
unilateral striatal lesions specifically produce a response-related
deficit (Mayer et al., 1992 ). In addition, there are several lines of
evidence in the present study that suggest that lesioned animals are
processing many aspects of visual information virtually normally.
First, when rats responded contralaterally, they did so in a
delay-dependent manner (Fig. 4). If the nose withdrawal was determined by waiting for a set time, rather than by stimulus presentation, then
the reaction times at each delay would differ by the difference in
delay periods (i.e., reaction times at the first and last delay would
differ by 600 msec), which clearly they did not. This suggests that
lesioned animals were under a degree of stimulus control, even when
responding contralaterally. Second, although lesioned animals, when
responding contralaterally, did so almost exclusively to the near hole,
it appears that the rats could still discriminate between the near and
far stimuli. This is suggested by lesioned animals initiating correct
responses more quickly than incorrect responses, reflecting the pattern
seen ipsilaterally. Furthermore, a sensory attentional deficit would
not account for contralateral stimuli eliciting ipsilateral (and
therefore incorrect) responses, which are produced for bilateral hole
configurations. The contralateral deficit, therefore, would seem to be
an impairment in the control of responding to contralateral space. Nor
can it be argued that the near hole bias exhibited by the lesioned rats
when responding contralaterally is attributable to a simple motor
incapacity to move to the far hole, because lesioned animals could move
to the far hole during postoperative sessions that involved a bilateral configuration of response holes (Fig. 7). The fact that lesioned animals do not respond in the far hole when both response options are
contralateral indicates that this bias is attributable in part to the
presence of the near hole and presumably results from competing
tendencies to respond there, which are so potent that they occlude
responding in the far contralateral hole altogether.
Apart from this clear neglect of contralateral space, there were also
secondary, unlateralized deficits. First, premature responding was
increased equally on both sides. Second, near hole bias increased
slightly on the ipsilateral side, although reaction times to the
ipsilateral holes were not affected by the lesion. This is unlikely to
be attributable to any disruption of response coding, for reasons that
are discussed below. In addition, movement time was retarded mildly to
the far ipsilateral hole. Such impairments, however, seem less marked
and may reflect general effects of surgery. Thus, the ipsilateral near
hole bias was no longer seen in the challenges presented 4 weeks
postoperatively, suggesting a degree of recovery, whereas the
contralateral bias never recovered (Fig. 6).
Egocentric versus allocentric response coding
The evidence discussed above shows that contralateral neglect is
not a simple visual or motor deficit, but may reflect how responding is
organized spatially. The paradigm used further enabled an examination
of the nature of the striatal spatial processing deficit in egocentric
or allocentric terms. The logic followed that used to investigate
analogous deficits seen in rats with unilateral striatal dopamine
depletion (Brown and Robbins 1989a ). In the present study, in which
animals were trained to perform the task to both sides, lesioned
animals were impaired on the contralateral side only. The absence of
ipsilateral deficits suggested an egocentric coding of response space.
If response space was coded relative to an external referent, such as
the response holes themselves, then a bias might be expected toward the
relatively ipsilateral hole (i.e., the far hole when the task is
performed to the ipsilateral side). This is evidently not the case,
even when both response holes are lit (Fig. 6). Therefore, the near hole bias seen for contralateral responding would appear to be the
product of a deficit in response space that is defined egocentrically, i.e., with respect to the animal's midline. Such an interpretation is
in keeping with the disruption in orienting behavior that accompanies unilateral striatal dopamine depletion (Fairley and Marshall, 1986 ).
It is possible that the near hole bias seen for contralateral holes may
not reflect a disruption of response space but arises instead from an
inability to inhibit responses directed toward the near hole. Such a
possibility was investigated using the four novel response hole
configurations, each of which consisted of ipsilateral and
contralateral response apertures. In these circumstances, the lesioned
animals direct significantly more responses to the contralateral far
hole, suggesting a competitive influence of the near hole when it was
available for responding. However, the data are still compatible with
an explanation of the deficit in terms of response space. When
bilateral configurations of response holes were used postoperatively
(Fig. 7), the response bias was more sensitive to the position of the
contralateral, rather than the ipsilateral, hole. This is in keeping
with the idea of egocentric space coding, which would suggest that
ipsilateral responses here were not mediated by the lesioned striatum.
In addition, one can also compare the two asymmetric hole
configurations, near contralateral/far ipsilateral and near
ipsilateral/far contralateral. These two configurations consist of
response apertures that are the same distance apart, but the latter is
set further to the contralateral side relative to the animal's
midline. These two conditions would elicit similar response biases if
responding was allocentrically coded. However, the patterns of
responding are noticeably different (Fig. 7), with the more
contralaterally set holes (near ipsilateral/far contralateral)
producing a greater ipsilateral bias in lesioned animals. This is in
accordance with bilateral electrolytic lesion studies (Cook and Kesner,
1988 ; Kesner et al., 1993 ), electrophysiological data (Wiener, 1993 ),
and clinical evidence (Potegal, 1971 ), which suggest that that response
vectors, as mediated by the striatum, are determined with respect to
egocentric coordinates.
Striatal neglect may reflect distinct spatial domains
The issue of what mediates responding to the near contralateral
hole raises three possibilities. First, such responding may not involve
the striatum but a separate mechanism unaffected by the lesion. Second,
it may be that although response space is organized egocentrically,
each hemispace governed by the two striata overlaps at the midline, and
it is therefore the intact striatum that initiates responding to the
near contralateral hole. However, neither of these possibilities would
account for the increase in correct reaction times for responses to the
contralateral near hole (Fig. 4). The third option is that
contralateral responses were mediated by residual striatum on the
lesioned side. The bias seen contralaterally could therefore reflect a
collapse toward proximal space, as is the case after parietal damage
(Ladavas, 1987 ). However, converging anatomical data suggest that the
striatum is organized in a somatotopic, rather than a spatial, manner
(Alexander and Crutcher, 1990 ) (for review, see Parent and Hazrati,
1995 ). This raises the possibility that dorsal striatal lesions impact on distinct spatial domains. Rizzolatti et al. (1983) showed that discrete lesions of the frontal eye field and inferior premotor cortices in primates resulted in deficits in far (extrapersonal) space
and near (peripersonal) space, respectively. This dissociation may
provide a context in which to interpret the findings of the current
study.
The effect of the lesion is clarified when the lesioned striatum is put
in competition with the intact striatum, as in the bilateral hole
configurations. The enhanced bias seen when both stimuli are presented
simultaneously may reflect the outcome of competition between
processing in the intact and lesioned striatum, each of which would
normally exhibit a degree of independence. Thus, competition normally
occurs between striata as well as between response sets for different
responses within each striatum. When the striatum is lesioned
unilaterally there are thus two effects: bias to ipsilateral space and
bias to the proximal portion of contralateral space. It is possible
that competition may only occur between striata for near peripersonal
space. This would readily account for the unexpected finding that there
was no significant extinction effect was observed in the far
ipsilateral/far contralateral condition. The deficit in responding to
the distal location contralaterally may represent a specific impairment
in responding to locations in far extrapersonal space. This is in
keeping with the separate mechanisms that have been shown to exist in
the frontal cortices of the primate for distinct spatial domains
(Rizzolatti et al., 1983 ), and furthermore, the neural structure
responsible (frontal eye field) converges with parietal input to the
striatum. The abolition of bias with no visual stimulus, and the lack
of lateralized premature responses, suggests that it arises from an
interaction between an internal disposition and the presence of
specific cues for instrumental action.
FOOTNOTES
Received Aug. 6, 1997; accepted Sept. 5, 1997.
This work was supported by the Medical Research Council (United
Kingdom). We thank E. Torres for assistance with the histological analysis.
Correspondence should be addressed to Peter J. Brasted, Medical
Research Council Cambridge Centre for Brain Repair, University of
Cambridge, Forvie Site, Robinson Way, Cambridge, CB2 2PY, UK.
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