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Date: April 12th

Time: 09:30 am

Place : Gonda 2303

Title : "Neural mechanisms mediating inferential reasoning in rats."

Speaker: Cynthia Fast

Abstract: Many decisions are made under conditions of uncertainty. We rarely have access to all of the information in our environment that is pertinent to making an important decision. In fact, our lives are replete with ambiguous situations that nonetheless require consideration. Yet it is unclear what cognitive and neural processes enable the distinction between explicit and ambiguous situations. Moreover, it is unknown what processes mediate inferential reasoning when an ambiguous situation has been detected. We have recently discovered that rats are capable of distinguishing between the ambiguous absence of an event and its explicit absence. That is, like humans, rats appear to recognize the conditions under which they should be able to observe an event and those conditions under which the event should be hidden from observation. Interestingly, this ability depends on prior learning. In a series of experiments, we explored the necessary and sufficient features of prior learning that contribute to sensitivity to ambiguity as well as potential underlying neural mechanisms. Specifically, micro-infusions of scopolamine into the dorsal hippocampus appear to eliminate this reasoning ability, suggesting a critical role for hippocampal cholinergic modulation under normal conditions. Additionally, analysis of cfos expression in the brains of reasoning and non-reasoning rats offer further insight into possible neural circuits mediating reasoning about absent events.