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On daily time-place learning tasks animals can work for food at different spatial locations during sessions at different times of the day. In previous experiments rats tracked this pattern of food availability with ordinal timing-they learned to respond at the locations in the correct order each day. In contrast, pigeons used circadian timing. In this experiment rats received a mixture of morning...
Rats received morning, midday, and afternoon sessions each day in a chamber located in a room containing distal spatial cues. A lever was mounted on each of the four walls. The rats could work for food on a different lever during each of the three sessions. The rats were able to learn the location of food availability during morning, midday, and afternoon sessions. Results obtained after skipped morning,...
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