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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2001, 21(13):4908-4914
Distinct Changes in Cortical Acetylcholine and Noradrenaline
Efflux during Contingent and Noncontingent Performance of a Visual
Attentional Task
Jeffrey W.
Dalley1,
Jill
McGaughy1,
Mark T.
O'Connell2,
Rudolf N.
Cardinal1,
Liat
Levita1, and
Trevor W.
Robbins1
1 Department of Experimental Psychology,
University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom CB2 3EB, and
2 Academic Department of Neurosurgery and Wolfson Brain
Imaging Centre, University of Cambridge, Addenbrooke's Hospital,
Cambridge, United Kingdom CB2 2QQ
Optimization of cognitive processing may depend on specific and
distinct functions of the cortical cholinergic and noradrenergic systems. This investigation dissociates functions of cortical acetylcholine (ACh) and noradrenaline (NA) in arousal and visual attention by simultaneously measuring ACh and NA efflux in the rat
prefrontal cortex during sustained attentional performance. The
five-choice serial reaction time task was used to provide a continuous
assessment of visuospatial attention. Previous studies using this task
have established a critical role for the cortical cholinergic system in
the detection of visual targets. However, selective lesions of the
locus coeruleus noradrenergic system impair performance only when
additional attentional demands are placed on the subject by distractors
or temporally unpredictable targets. To test the hypothesis that the
cortical noradrenergic system is particularly sensitive to novel task
contingencies, we also assessed NA and ACh efflux in rats that been
trained previously on the task but for whom the instrumental
contingency coupling responding with stimulus detection and reward was
abolished. Cortical ACh efflux showed a robust and task-related
increase during established contingent performance. This response was
significantly attenuated in noncontingent subjects, although it still
exceeded pretask values. In contrast, NA efflux only increased
transiently in contingent subjects after task onset but showed
sustained elevations in noncontingent subjects on the first day when
contingencies were changed. These data also implicate cortical ACh in
aspects of attentional functioning but highlight a specific involvement
of the cortical noradrenergic system in detecting shifts in the
predictive relationship between instrumental action and reinforcement.
Key words:
cognition; attention; arousal; in vivo
microdialysis; prefrontal cortex; instrumental contingency learning
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/21134908-07$05.00/0
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