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Dive into the research topics where Martha Hvoslef-Eide is active.

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Featured researches published by Martha Hvoslef-Eide.


Nature Protocols | 2013

The touchscreen operant platform for testing learning and memory in rats and mice

Alexa E. Horner; Christopher J. Heath; Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Brianne A. Kent; Chi Hun Kim; Simon R. O. Nilsson; Johan Alsiö; Charlotte Oomen; Andrew B. Holmes; Lisa M. Saksida; Timothy J. Bussey

An increasingly popular method of assessing cognitive functions in rodents is the automated touchscreen platform, on which a number of different cognitive tests can be run in a manner very similar to touchscreen methods currently used to test human subjects. This methodology is low stress (using appetitive rather than aversive reinforcement), has high translational potential and lends itself to a high degree of standardization and throughput. Applications include the study of cognition in rodent models of psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases (e.g., Alzheimers disease, schizophrenia, Huntingtons disease, frontotemporal dementia), as well as the characterization of the role of select brain regions, neurotransmitter systems and genes in rodents. This protocol describes how to perform four touchscreen assays of learning and memory: visual discrimination, object-location paired-associates learning, visuomotor conditional learning and autoshaping. It is accompanied by two further protocols (also published in this issue) that use the touchscreen platform to assess executive function, working memory and pattern separation.


Psychopharmacology | 2015

The NEWMEDS rodent touchscreen test battery for cognition relevant to schizophrenia

Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Adam C. Mar; Sro Nilsson; Johan Alsiö; Christopher J. Heath; Lisa M. Saksida; Trevor W. Robbins; Timothy J. Bussey

RationaleThe NEWMEDS initiative (Novel Methods leading to New Medications in Depression and Schizophrenia, http://www.newmeds-europe.com) is a large industrial-academic collaborative project aimed at developing new methods for drug discovery for schizophrenia. As part of this project, Work package 2 (WP02) has developed and validated a comprehensive battery of novel touchscreen tasks for rats and mice for assessing cognitive domains relevant to schizophrenia.ObjectivesThis article provides a review of the touchscreen battery of tasks for rats and mice for assessing cognitive domains relevant to schizophrenia and highlights validation data presented in several primary articles in this issue and elsewhere.MethodsThe battery consists of the five-choice serial reaction time task and a novel rodent continuous performance task for measuring attention, a three-stimulus visual reversal and the serial visual reversal task for measuring cognitive flexibility, novel non-matching to sample-based tasks for measuring spatial working memory and paired-associates learning for measuring long-term memory.ResultsThe rodent (i.e. both rats and mice) touchscreen operant chamber and battery has high translational value across species due to its emphasis on construct as well as face validity. In addition, it offers cognitive profiling of models of diseases with cognitive symptoms (not limited to schizophrenia) through a battery approach, whereby multiple cognitive constructs can be measured using the same apparatus, enabling comparisons of performance across tasks.ConclusionThis battery of tests constitutes an extensive tool package for both model characterisation and pre-clinical drug discovery.


Frontiers of Biology in China | 2016

Adult neurogenesis and pattern separation in rodents: A critical evaluation of data, tasks and interpretation

Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Charlotte Oomen

The ability to discriminate and store similar inputs as distinct representations in memory is thought to rely on a process called pattern separation in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. Recent computational and empirical findings support a role for adult-born granule neurons in spatial pattern separation. We reviewed rodent studies that have manipulated both hippocampal adult neurogenesis and assessed pattern separation. The majority of studies report a supporting role of adult born neurons in pattern separation as measured at the behavioral level. However, closer evaluation of the published findings reveals variation in both pattern separation tasks and in the interpretation of behavioral performance that, taken together, suggests that the role of hippocampal adult neurogenesis in pattern separation may be less established than is currently assumed. Assessment of pattern separation at the network level through the use of immediate early gene expression, optogenetic, pharmacogenetic and/or in vivo electrophysiology studies could be instrumental in further confirming a role of adult born neurons in pattern separation further. Finally, hippocampal adult neurogenesis and pattern separation are not an exclusive pair, as evidence for hippocampal adult neurogenesis contributing to the temporal separation of events in memory, forgetting and cognitive flexibility has also been found. We conclude that whereas current empirical evidence for the involvement of hippocampal adult neurogenesis in pattern separation seems supportive, there is a need for careful interpretation of behavioral findings and an integration of the various proposed functions of adult born neurons.


Psychopharmacology | 2015

Trial-unique, delayed nonmatching-to-location (TUNL) touchscreen testing for mice: sensitivity to dorsal hippocampal dysfunction

Chi Hun Kim; Carola Romberg; Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Charlotte Oomen; Adam C. Mar; Christopher J. Heath; Andrée-Anne Berthiaume; Timothy J. Bussey; Lisa M. Saksida

RationaleThe hippocampus is implicated in many of the cognitive impairments observed in conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and schizophrenia (SCZ). Often, mice are the species of choice for models of these diseases and the study of the relationship between brain and behaviour more generally. Thus, automated and efficient hippocampal-sensitive cognitive tests for the mouse are important for developing therapeutic targets for these diseases, and understanding brain-behaviour relationships. One promising option is to adapt the touchscreen-based trial-unique nonmatching-to-location (TUNL) task that has been shown to be sensitive to hippocampal dysfunction in the rat.ObjectivesThis study aims to adapt the TUNL task for use in mice and to test for hippocampus-dependency of the task.MethodsTUNL training protocols were altered such that C57BL/6 mice were able to acquire the task. Following acquisition, dysfunction of the dorsal hippocampus (dHp) was induced using a fibre-sparing excitotoxin, and the effects of manipulation of several task parameters were examined.ResultsMice could acquire the TUNL task using training optimised for the mouse (experiments 1). TUNL was found to be sensitive to dHp dysfunction in the mouse (experiments 2, 3 and 4). In addition, we observed that performance of dHp dysfunction group was somewhat consistently lower when sample locations were presented in the centre of the screen.ConclusionsThis study opens up the possibility of testing both mouse and rat models on this flexible and hippocampus-sensitive touchscreen task.


Psychopharmacology | 2015

Facilitation of spatial working memory performance following intra-prefrontal cortical administration of the adrenergic alpha1 agonist phenylephrine

Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Charlotte Oomen; Beth Fisher; Christopher J. Heath; Trevor W. Robbins; Lisa M. Saksida; Timothy J. Bussey

RationaleSpatial working memory is dependent on the appropriate functioning of the prefrontal cortex (PFC). PFC activity can be modulated by noradrenaline (NA) released by afferent projections from the locus coeruleus. The coreuleo-cortical NA system could therefore be a target for cognitive enhancers of spatial working memory. Of the three classes of NA receptor potentially involved, the α2 and α1 classes seem most significant, though agents targeting these receptors have yielded mixed results. This may be partially due to the use of behavioural assays that do not translate effectively from the laboratory to the clinical setting. Use of a paradigm with improved translational potential may be essential to resolve these discrepancies.ObjectivesThe objective of this study was to assess the effects of PFC-infused α2 and α1 adrenergic receptor agonists on spatial working memory performance in the touchscreen continuous trial-unique non-matching to location (cTUNL) task in rats.MethodsYoung male rats were trained in the cTUNL paradigm. Cannulation of the mPFC allowed direct administration of GABA agonists for task validation, and phenylephrine and guanfacine to determine the effects of adrenergic agonists on task performance.ResultsInfusion of muscimol and baclofen resulted in a delay-dependent impairment. Administration of the α2 agonist guanfacine had no effect, whilst infusion of the α1 agonist phenylephrine significantly improved working memory performance.ConclusionsSpatial working memory as measured in the rat cTUNL task is dependent on the mPFC. Enhancement of noradrenergic signalling enhanced performance in this paradigm, suggesting a significant role for the α1 receptor in this facilitation.


Psychopharmacology | 2015

A novel 2- and 3-choice touchscreen-based continuous trial-unique nonmatching-to-location task (cTUNL) sensitive to functional differences between dentate gyrus and CA3 subregions of the hippocampus.

Charlotte Oomen; Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Daniel Kofink; Friederike Preusser; Adam C. Mar; Lisa M. Saksida; Timothy J. Bussey

RationaleThe touchscreen continuous trial-unique non-matching-to-location task (cTUNL) has been developed to optimise a battery of tasks under NEWMEDS (Novel Methods leading to New Medication in Depression and Schizophrenia, http://www.newmeds-europe.com). It offers novel task features of both a practical and a theoretical nature compared to existing touchscreen tasks for spatial working memory.ObjectivesThe objective of this study was to determine whether the cTUNL task is sufficiently sensitive to differentiate between dentate gyrus (DG) and CA3 hippocampal subregion contributions to performance.MethodsThe effect of DG and CA3 dysfunction on memory for locations in the cTUNL task was tested. Rats were assessed on versions of the task—two-choice and three-choice—that differed in memory load. Performance was challenged using manipulations of delay and the spatial separation between target and sample locations.ResultsDysfunction of the DG disrupts performance across both delay and spatial separations in two-choice cTUNL when the delay is variable and unpredictable. Increasing the working memory load (three stimuli) increases sensitivity to DG dysfunction, with deficits apparent at fixed, short delays. In contrast, CA3 dysfunction did not disrupt performance.ConclusionAcquisition of cTUNL was rapid, and the task was sensitive to manipulations of delays and separations. A three-choice version of the task was found to be viable. Finally, both the two- and three-choice versions of the task were able to differentiate between limited dysfunction to different areas within the hippocampus. DG dysfunction affected performance when using unpredictable task parameters. CA3 dysfunction did not result in impairment, even at the longest delays tested.


Current topics in behavioral neurosciences | 2015

Cognitive Translation Using the Rodent Touchscreen Testing Approach

Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Simon R. O. Nilsson; Lisa M. Saksida; Timothy J. Bussey

The development of novel therapeutic avenues for the treatment of cognitive deficits in psychiatric and neurodegenerative disease is of high importance, yet progress in this field has been slow. One reason for this lack of success may lie in discrepancies between how cognitive functions are assessed in experimental animals and humans. In an attempt to bridge this translational gap, the rodent touchscreen testing platform is suggested as a translational tool. Specific examples of successful cross-species translation are discussed focusing on paired associate learning (PAL), the 5-choice serial reaction time task (5-CSRTT), the rodent continuous performance task (rCPT) and reversal learning. With ongoing research assessing the neurocognitive validity of tasks, the touchscreen approach is likely to become increasingly prevalent in translational cognitive research.


Nature Protocols | 2013

The touchscreen operant platform for testing working memory and pattern separation in rats and mice

Charlotte Oomen; Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Christopher J. Heath; Adam C. Mar; Alexa E. Horner; Timothy J. Bussey; Lisa M. Saksida


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2016

The representational–hierarchical view of pattern separation: Not just hippocampus, not just space, not just memory?

Brianne A. Kent; Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Lisa M. Saksida; Timothy J. Bussey


Psychopharmacology | 2015

The continuous performance test (rCPT) for mice: a novel operant touchscreen test of attentional function.

Chi Hun Kim; Martha Hvoslef-Eide; Simon R. O. Nilsson; Mark R. Johnson; Bronwen R. Herbert; Trevor W. Robbins; Lisa M. Saksida; Timothy J. Bussey; Adam C. Mar

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Lisa M. Saksida

University of Western Ontario

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Timothy J. Bussey

University of Western Ontario

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Adam C. Mar

University of Cambridge

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Chi Hun Kim

Samsung Medical Center

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Brianne A. Kent

University of British Columbia

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