Artículos de revistas
Selective attention to visual stimuli using auditory distractors is altered in alpha-9 nicotinic receptor subunit knock-out mice
Fecha
2016Registro en:
Journal of Neuroscience, Volumen 36, Issue 27, 2018, Pages 7198-7209
15292401
02706474
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4031-15.2016
Autor
Terreros, Gonzalo
Jorratt, Pascal
Aedo, Cristian
Elgoyhen, Ana Belén
Delano, Paul H.
Institución
Resumen
© 2016 the authors. During selective attention, subjects voluntarily focus their cognitive resources on a specific stimulus while ignoring others. Top-down filtering of peripheral sensory responses by higher structures of the brain has been proposed as one of the mechanisms responsible for selective attention. A prerequisite to accomplish top-down modulation of the activity of peripheral structures is the presence of corticofugal pathways. The mammalian auditory efferent system is a unique neural network that originates in the auditory cortex and projects to the cochlear receptor through the olivocochlear bundle, and it has been proposed to function as a top-down filter of peripheral auditory responses during attention to cross-modal stimuli. However, to date, there is no conclusive evidence of the involvement of olivocochlear neurons in selective attention paradigms. Here, we trained wild-type and α-9 nicotinic receptor subunit knock-out (KO) mice, which lack cholinergic transmission