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The Journal of Neuroscience, December 1, 2000, 20(23):8897-8901
Thalamic Reticular Nucleus Activation Reflects Attentional Gating
during Classical Conditioning
Kerry
McAlonan,
Verity J.
Brown, and
Eric M.
Bowman
School of Psychology, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews KY16
9JU, United Kingdom
All senses, except olfaction, are routed through the thalamus to
cerebral cortex. Thus, the thalamus is often referred to as the sensory
gateway to cortex. Located between thalamus and cortex is a thin lamina
of neurons called the thalamic reticular nucleus, which may function as
an attentional gate. The phenomenon of blocking in classical
conditioning provides an opportunity to test whether an attended
stimulus activates the thalamic reticular nucleus more than an
unattended stimulus: when a second stimulus is presented together with
a previously conditioned stimulus, conditioned responding to the second
stimulus is inhibited.
Different groups of rats were given conditioning sessions with a single
stimulus, a light or a tone, and then given conditioning sessions with
compound (light and tone) stimuli. Blocking was confirmed using probe
trials of single stimulus presentations. After a final test session of
compound stimulus presentations, the brains were processed for the
presence of Fos protein. Here we show that Fos-positive neurons were
more numerous in the sector of the thalamic reticular nucleus
associated with the attended conditioned stimulus than in the sector
associated with the unattended stimulus. Thus, we provide evidence for
an involvement of the thalamic reticular nucleus in selective attention.
Key words:
attention; thalamus; thalamic reticular nucleus; classical conditioning; rat; blocking
Copyright © 2000 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/00/20238897-05$05.00/0
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