Abstract
Rats with bilateral dorsal hippocampal lesions were impaired when tested on standard (non-cued) versions of the radial arm maze, but other hippocampal groups performed almost as well as cortical and operated control groups when salient visual cues were added to each arm. Preoperative training on the non-cued, but not the cued, maze interfered with the benefits of postoperatively cuing hippocampal groups. Control groups performed equally well under all cuing and training conditions. Procedures that eliminated response sequencing did not affect performance of hippocampal or control groups. The hippocampus may be involved in mediating spatial cues but not necessarily along the lines predicted by cognitive map theory. Deficits of animals with hippocampal lesions may represent one manifestation of a general impairment in processing information.