Journal article
Temporal cueing enhances neuronal and behavioral discrimination performance in rat whisker system
CCY Lee, CWG Clifford, E Arabzadeh
Journal of Neurophysiology | Published : 2019
Abstract
Since sensory systems operate with a finite quantity of processing resources, an animal would benefit from prioritizing processing of sensory stimuli within a time window that is expected to provide key information. This behavioral manifestation of such prioritization is known as attention. Here, we investigate attention with temporal cueing and its neuronal correlates in the rat primary vibrissal somatosensory (vS1) cortex. Rats were trained in a simple whisker vibration detection task. A vibration was presented at one of two spatial locations (left or right), sometimes after an unknown time interval and sometimes after receiving an auditory cue. The auditory cue provided temporal but not s..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by Centre of Excellence for Integrative Brain Function, Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council [ARC Discovery Project DP130101364, the NHMRC Project Grant (APP1124411), and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Integrative Brain Function CE140100007].