| Literature DB >> 25628549 |
Justin K Siemann1, Christopher L Muller2, Gary Bamberger3, John D Allison4, Jeremy Veenstra-VanderWeele5, Mark T Wallace6.
Abstract
Human psychophysical and animal behavioral studies have illustrated the benefits that can be conferred from having information available from multiple senses. Given the central role of multisensory integration for perceptual and cognitive function, it is important to design behavioral paradigms for animal models to provide mechanistic insights into the neural bases of these multisensory processes. Prior studies have focused on large mammals, yet the mouse offers a host of advantages, most importantly the wealth of available genetic manipulations relevant to human disease. To begin to employ this model species for multisensory research it is necessary to first establish and validate a robust behavioral assay for the mouse. Two common mouse strains (C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEv) were first trained to respond to unisensory (visual and auditory) stimuli separately. Once trained, performance with paired audiovisual stimuli was then examined with a focus on response accuracy and behavioral gain. Stimulus durations varied from 50 ms to 1 s in order to modulate the effectiveness of the stimuli and to determine if the well-established "principle of inverse effectiveness" held in this model. Response accuracy in the multisensory condition was greater than for either unisensory condition for all stimulus durations, with significant gains observed at the 300 ms and 100 ms durations. Main effects of stimulus duration, stimulus modality and a significant interaction between these factors were observed. The greatest behavioral gain was seen for the 100 ms duration condition, with a trend observed that as the stimuli became less effective, larger behavioral gains were observed upon their pairing (i.e., inverse effectiveness). These results are the first to validate the mouse as a species that shows demonstrable behavioral facilitations under multisensory conditions and provides a platform for future mechanistically directed studies to examine the neural bases of multisensory integration.Entities:
Keywords: auditory processing; mouse behavior; mouse models; multisensory integration; operant conditioning; visual processing
Year: 2015 PMID: 25628549 PMCID: PMC4290729 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Behavioral task schematic. (A) Diagram of operant chamber during the presentation of an audiovisual stimulus (represented by the yellow color within the nose poke hole, where the LED was positioned) and by the active speaker. (B) Schematic representation of the trial sequence and timing. The phrase variable represents the amount of time that progresses until the animal decides to initiate a new trial by then performing a nose poke in the central hole.
Figure 2Criterion performance on unisensory tasks. Average behavioral accuracies for visual only (blue) and auditory only (red) training conditions for two consecutive days once animals had reached 65% correct criterion performance. A significant difference (p = 0.0002) in behavioral performance was found when comparing visual and auditory performance across animals. Error bars represent SEM.
Figure 3Behavioral accuracy for auditory, visual and audiovisual conditions across stimulus durations. (A) Accuracy for each of the conditions collapsed across all stimulus durations. (B) Accuracies as a function of sensory modality and duration. Note that response accuracy was greatest for multisensory compared to unisensory conditions across all of the tested durations. Data are presented from nine male mice of both C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEv strains. Dotted line represents 50% accuracy or chance level. Error bars represent SEM. The significant levels are as follows: (* = p < 0.05, ** = p < 0.01, *** = p < 0.001, **** = p < 0.0001).
Behavioral accuracies for each sensory modality across stimulus durations.
| Sensory Modality | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Stimulus duration | Multisensory | Visual | Auditory |
| 1 s | 90.0 (1.56) | 87.5 (1.94) | 82.3 (1.79) |
| 300 ms | 81.8 (1.60) | 76.2 (1.92) | 69.4 (1.58) |
| 100 ms | 73.9 (2.52) | 66.2 (3.00) | 66.5 (2.67) |
| 50 ms | 65.4 (2.33) | 65.3 (1.70) | 58.1 (1.63) |
Accuracies were greatest under multisensory conditions compared to unisensory conditions for all of the tested stimulus durations. Overall, accuracies decreased as the stimulus duration shortened. Data are presented from nine male mice of both C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEv strains. SEM is represented in parentheses.
Figure 4Performance differences between multisensory and best unisensory conditions for individual animals. Multisensory and the best unisensory performance accuracies were averaged separately for each mouse across the 5 days of testing for each stimulus duration. Black lines represent the group average performance under multisensory and the best unisensory conditions. Note the descending slope of these lines, which is most apparent for the 300 ms and 100 ms duration conditions. Data are presented from nine male mice of both C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEv strains. The significant levels are as follows: (* = p < 0.05, ** = p < 0.01).
Figure 5Effects of testing day on behavioral performance. No significant main effects of testing day were observed under (A) multisensory (p = 0.846), (B) visual (p = 0.381) or (C) auditory conditions (p = 0.514) using a repeated measures 2-way ANOVA (Tukey’s test). Data are presented from nine male mice of both C57BL/6J and 129S6/SvEv strains. Error bars represent SEM.