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Cholinergic control of visual categorization in macaques
- Source :
- Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, Vol 5 (2011)
- Publication Year :
- 2011
-
Abstract
- Acetylcholine (ACh) is a neurotransmitter acting via muscarinic and nicotinic receptors that is implicated in several cognitive functions and impairments, such as Alzheimer’s disease. It is believed to especially affect the acquisition of new information, which is particularly important when behaviour needs to be adapted to new situations and to novel sensory events. Categorisation, the process of assigning stimuli to a category, is a cognitive function that also involves information acquisition. The role of ACh on categorisation has not been previously studied. We have examined the effects of scopolamine, an antagonist of muscarinic ACh receptors, on visual categorisation in macaque monkeys using familiar and novel stimuli. When the peripheral effects of scopolamine on the parasympathetic nervous system were controlled for, categorisation performance was disrupted following systemic injections of scopolamine. This impairment was observed only when the stimuli that needed to be categorised had not been seen before. In other words, the monkeys were not impaired by the central action of scopolamine in categorising a set of familiar stimuli (stimuli which they had categorised successfully in previous sessions). Categorisation performance also deteriorated as the stimulus became less salient by an increase in the level of visual noise. However, scopolamine did not cause additional performance disruptions for difficult categorisation judgements at lower coherence levels. Scopolamine, therefore, specifically affects the assignment of new exemplars to established cognitive categories, presumably by impairing the processing of novel information. Since we did not find an effect of scopolamine in the categorisation of familiar stimuli, scopolamine had no significant central action on other cognitive functions such as perception, attention, memory or executive control within the context of our categorisation task.
- Subjects :
- muscarinic
Cognitive Neuroscience
media_common.quotation_subject
Sensory system
Stimulus (physiology)
Macaque
scopolamine
lcsh:RC321-571
cognitive
Behavioral Neuroscience
Cognition
biology.animal
Perception
Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor
Learning
lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry
Original Research
media_common
biology
macaque
categorization
Acetylcholine
Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Categorization
Cholinergic
Psychology
Neuroscience
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, Vol 5 (2011)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9e50faafb64c57db3c83f0a7ffc5e912