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Strategic stabilization of arousal boosts sustained attention

  • Jan Willem de Gee
  • , Zakir Mridha
  • , Marisa Hudson
  • , Yanchen Shi
  • , Hannah Ramsaywak
  • , Spencer Smith
  • , Nishad Karediya
  • , Matthew Thompson
  • , Kit Jaspe
  • , Hong Jiang
  • , Wenhao Zhang
  • , Matthew J. McGinley
  • Baylor College of Medicine
  • Texas Children's Hospital
  • University of Amsterdam
  • University of Amsterdam
  • Rice University

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

4 引用 (Scopus)

摘要

Arousal and motivation interact to profoundly influence behavior. For example, experience tells us that we have some capacity to control our arousal when appropriately motivated, such as staying awake while driving a motor vehicle. However, little is known about how arousal and motivation jointly influence decision computations, including if and how animals, such as rodents, adapt their arousal state to their needs. Here, we developed and show results from an auditory, feature-based, sustained-attention task with intermittently shifting task utility. We use pupil size to estimate arousal across a wide range of states and apply tailored signal-detection theoretic, hazard function, and accumulation-to-bound modeling approaches in a large cohort of mice. We find that pupil-linked arousal and task utility both have major impacts on multiple aspects of task performance. Although substantial arousal fluctuations persist across utility conditions, mice partially stabilize their arousal near an intermediate and optimal level when task utility is high. Behavioral analyses show that multiple elements of behavior improve during high task utility and that arousal influences some, but not all, of them. Specifically, arousal influences the likelihood and timescale of sensory evidence accumulation but not the quantity of evidence accumulated per time step while attending. In sum, the results establish specific decision-computational signatures of arousal, motivation, and their interaction in attention. So doing, we provide an experimental and analysis framework for studying arousal self-regulation in neurotypical brains and in diseases such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

源语言英语
页(从-至)4114-4128.e6
期刊Current Biology
34
18
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 23 9月 2024
已对外发布

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