Degrading stimuli by reducing image resolution impairs performance in a rodent continuous performance test.

Behavioural processes(2023)

引用 0|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Attention is a cognitive domain often disrupted in neuropsychiatric disorders and continuous performance tests (CPTs) are common clinical assays of attention. In CPTs, participants produce a behavioral response to target stimuli and refrain from responding to non-target stimuli. Performance in CPTs is measured as the ability to discriminate between targets and non-targets. Rodent versions of CPTs (rCPTs) have been validated with both anatomical and pharmacological studies, providing a translational platform for understanding attention function. In humans, stimulus degradation, the inclusion of visual noise in the image to reduce resolution, in CPTs impairs performance. Reduced image contrast, changes in the relative luminescence of elements in the image, has been used in rCPTs to test similar constructs, but, to our knowledge, reduced image resolution has not been tested in an rCPT. In this study, we tested multiple levels of stimulus degradation in a touchscreen version of the rCPT in mice. We found that stimulus degradation significantly decreased performance in males and females. Specifically, we found decreased stimulus discrimination and increases in hit reaction time and reaction time variability. These findings are in line with the effects of stimulus degradation in human studies. These data extend the utility and translational value of the family of rCPTs by demonstrating that stimulus degradation in the form of reduced image resolution produces qualitatively similarequivalent behavioral responses in mice as those in previous human studies.
更多
查看译文
关键词
image resolution,rodent,stimuli,performance
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要