Oasis Maze

The oasis maze is a spatial memory task used in psychology and neuroscience research and is the dry version of the Morris water navigation task. It is a land-based spatial memory task in which a thirsty rat uses distal spatial cues to search an open field for a specific location (Oasis) containing water. The maze consists of an enclosed space (usually the same shape and dimensions of the space used in the Morris water maze) in which a small amount of water is hidden. A thirsty rat is then placed in the maze and learns where the water is by trial and error. The maze tests memory by allowing the researcher to record the rat's performance on this task after it is learned and various time intervals or other events supposedly disruptive to memory have occurred.

Read more about Oasis Maze:  Apparatus, Phase I: Pretraining, Phase II: Spatial Training, Phase III: Retention Probe

Famous quotes containing the words oasis and/or maze:

    Are you not the oasis where I dream, and the gourd from which I drink in long draughts the wine of memory?
    Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867)

    Society bristles with enigmas which look hard to solve. It is a perfect maze of intrigue.
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