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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 3 March 2000, pp. 1536-1549
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1254
Davidson, M. C. and
R. T. Marrocco.
Local Infusion of Scopolamine Into Intraparietal Cortex Slows
Covert Orienting in Rhesus Monkeys. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 1536-1549, 2000. There is accumulating evidence to
suggest that cholinergic neurotransmission may play an important role
in visuospatial attention, but the brain sites at which acetylcholine
modulates attention are not well understood. The present work tested
the hypothesis that the cholinergic influences within the intraparietal
cortex are necessary for normal attentional shifting (covert orienting) in nonhuman primates. Two rhesus monkeys were trained to perform a
visual, cued target detection task for liquid reinforcement. The
animals pressed a lever to produce a visual display in which a central
fixation point was flanked by two circles. Shortly after fixation was
established, one of the circles brightened (cue), and a target appeared
subsequently within one of the circles. Detection was signaled by a
manual response and the reaction time to the appearance of the target
was recorded. Four types of trials were presented. For valid cue
trials, the cue and target were at the same spatial location; for
invalid cues, cue and target were in opposite hemifields; for double
cues, both cues were brightened but the target appeared in either the
left or right circle; in no-cue trials, the cue was omitted. We
localized the intraparietal region by recording attention-related,
cellular activity with intracerebral microelectrodes. Among visually
responsive cells in this area, valid cues presented to the receptive
fields of visual neurons enhanced the responses to target stimuli in
about half the cells and inhibited those responses in the remainder. In
addition, some cells showed longer response latencies to invalid cues
than to valid cues. We then infused scopolamine into attention-related activity sites and assessed its effect on performance. Scopolamine produced a dose-dependent increase in reaction times and decrease in
performance accuracy that lasted more than 1 h. Neither vehicle injections in the same locations nor scopolamine outside the
physiologically defined area produced any significant change in
behavior. Under our conditions of measurement, we conclude that
activity mediated by muscarinic cholinergic receptors within the
intraparietal cortex is necessary for normal covert orienting.
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