| Literature DB >> 27815215 |
Abbi R Hernandez1, Jordan E Reasor1, Leah M Truckenbrod1, Katelyn N Lubke2, Sarah A Johnson1, Jennifer L Bizon1, Andrew P Maurer2, Sara N Burke3.
Abstract
The ability to use information from the physical world to update behavioral strategies is critical for survival across species. The prefrontal cortex (PFC) supports behavioral flexibility; however, exactly how this brain structure interacts with sensory association cortical areas to facilitate the adaptation of response selection remains unknown. Given the role of the perirhinal cortex (PER) in higher-order perception and associative memory, the current study evaluated whether PFC-PER circuits are critical for the ability to perform biconditional object discriminations when the rule for selecting the rewarded object shifted depending on the animal's spatial location in a 2-arm maze. Following acquisition to criterion performance on an object-place paired association task, pharmacological blockade of communication between the PFC and PER significantly disrupted performance. Specifically, the PFC-PER disconnection caused rats to regress to a response bias of selecting an object on a particular side regardless of its identity. Importantly, the PFC-PER disconnection did not interfere with the capacity to perform object-only or location-only discriminations, which do not require the animal to update a response rule across trials. These findings are consistent with a critical role for PFC-PER circuits in rule shifting and the effective updating of a response rule across spatial locations. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: Entorhinal cortex; Executive functions; Functional connectivity; Hippocampus; Memory
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27815215 PMCID: PMC5214530 DOI: 10.1016/j.nlm.2016.10.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurobiol Learn Mem ISSN: 1074-7427 Impact factor: 2.877