学位论文详细信息
Learning to focus and focusing to learn : more than a cortical trick
Cognition;Executive functions (Neuropsychology);Attention;Set (Psychology);Subthalamus
Dhawan, Sandeep Sonny ; Brown, Verity Joy ; Brown, Verity Joy
University:University of St Andrews
Department:Psychology & Neuroscience (School of)
关键词: Cognition;    Executive functions (Neuropsychology);    Attention;    Set (Psychology);    Subthalamus;   
Others  :  https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/10023/15883/SandeepDhawanPhDThesis.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=y
来源: DR-NTU
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【 摘 要 】

The consequence of many psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders, such as Parkinson’s disease and schizophrenia, is an impairment in ‘executive functioning’; an umbrella term for several cognitive processes, including the focussing and shifting of attention and the inhibition of responding. The ability to form an ‘attentional set’ involves learning to discriminate qualities of a multidimensional cue, and to subsequently learn which quality is relevant, and therefore predictive of reward. According to recent research, the subthalamic nucleus (STN) and possibly the adjacent zona incerta (ZI) may mediate the formation of attentional set. Dysregulation of the STN as a result of Parkinson’s disease contributes to characteristic motor symptoms, and whilst deep-brain stimulation of this region may treat gross motor impairments, it may also impair cognition. The work in this thesis aimed to expand our understanding of the mechanisms of attentional set-formation, and the role of the STN in this process.This thesis evaluates new methods for examining set-formation in the attentional set-shifting task; rather than inferring this behaviour solely from the cost of shifting set, modifications to the task design in Chapters 3 & 4 explored several hypotheses designed to exploit a deficit in this behaviour. Chapter 6 revealed that inhibition of this region with designer receptors leads to a disruption in attentional selectivity, which compromises the ability to form an attentional set. This manifested as an inability to parse relevant information from irrelevant, and instead, animals learned the stimuli holistically. The findings in this thesis also suggested that reversal and attentional shifting processes do not operate independently, but rather in a hierarchy, and that consequently, the STN is a region that may be crucial in selecting appropriate responses during associative learning that leads to the formation of an attentional set.

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