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Motivated Attention and Prepulse Inhibition of Startle in Rats: Using Conditioned Reinforcers as Prepulses

  • SUNY Buffalo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

In humans, prepulse inhibition (PPI) of startle is greater during attended prestimuli than it is during ignored prestimuli, whereas in rats, most work has focused on passive PPI, which does not require attention. In the work described in this article, researchers developed a paradigm to assess attentional modification of PPI in rats using motivationally salient prepulses. Water-deprived rats were either conditioned to attend to a conditioned stimulus (CS; 1-s, 7-dB increase in white noise) paired with water (CS+ group), or they received uncorrelated presentations of white noise and water (CS0 group). After 10 conditioning sessions, startle probes (50 ms, 115 dB) were introduced, with the CS serving as a continuous prepulse. Three experiments examined PPI across a range of prepulse intensities (4-10 dB) and stimulus onset asynchronies (SOAs; 30-960 ms). PPI was consistently reduced in the CS+ group, particularly with a 10-dB prepulse and a 60-ms SOA. Thus, PPI in rats differed between attended and ignored prestimuli, but the effect was reversed in the results of research with humans. A fourth study eliminated the group difference by reversing the CS-water contingency. Methodological and motivational hypotheses regarding the current findings are discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1372-1382
Number of pages11
JournalBehavioral Neuroscience
Volume121
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2007

Keywords

  • attention
  • motivation
  • prepulse inhibition
  • reinforcement
  • startle

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