Acute stress switches spatial navigation strategy from egocentric to allocentric in a virtual Morris water maze.

Dustin J H van Gerven, Thomas Ferguson, Ronald W Skelton
Author Information
  1. Dustin J H van Gerven: Department of Psychology, University of Victoria, Canada.
  2. Thomas Ferguson: Department of Psychology, University of Victoria, Canada.
  3. Ronald W Skelton: Department of Psychology, University of Victoria, Canada. Electronic address: skelton@uvic.ca.

Abstract

Stress and stress hormones are known to influence the function of the hippocampus, a brain structure critical for cognitive-map-based, allocentric spatial navigation. The caudate nucleus, a brain structure critical for stimulus-response-based, egocentric navigation, is not as sensitive to stress. Evidence for this comes from rodent studies, which show that acute stress or stress hormones impair allocentric, but not egocentric navigation. However, there have been few studies investigating the effect of acute stress on human spatial navigation, and the results of these have been equivocal. To date, no study has investigated whether acute stress can shift human navigational strategy selection between allocentric and egocentric navigation. The present study investigated this question by exposing participants to an acute psychological stressor (the Paced Auditory Serial Addition Task, PASAT), before testing navigational strategy selection in the Dual-Strategy Maze, a modified virtual Morris water maze. In the Dual-Strategy maze, participants can chose to navigate using a constellation of extra-maze cues (allocentrically) or using a single cue proximal to the goal platform (egocentrically). Surprisingly, PASAT stress biased participants to solve the maze allocentrically significantly more, rather than less, often. These findings have implications for understanding the effects of acute stress on cognitive function in general, and the function of the hippocampus in particular.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adult
Female
Humans
Male
Maze Learning
Psychomotor Performance
Spatial Navigation
Stress, Psychological
Virtual Reality
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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