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Inactivation of the Anterior Cingulate Reveals Enhanced Reliance on Cortical Networks for Remote Spatial Memory Retrieval after Sequential Memory Processing

Figure 4

Percent of time spent swimming in the target quadrant during the 60 second probe (A), from 0–30 seconds (B) and 31–60 seconds (C).

The dashed line represents chance performance (25%). A) During the 60 second probe, all experimental groups spent above chance amounts of time swimming in the target quadrant, except rats trained on two spatial tasks, tested remotely and given a muscimol injection (WM/RAM:Remote:Muscimol). B) From 0–30 seconds, all experimental groups spent above chance amounts of time swimming in the target quadrant, except rats trained on two spatial tasks, tested remotely and given a muscimol injection (WM/RAM:Remote:Muscimol). C) From 31–60 seconds fewer groups displayed a preference for the target quadrant. * Significantly different from chance performance (p<0.05).

Figure 4

doi: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0108711.g004