Sauce Bruno, Wass Christopher, Smith Andrew, Kwan Stephanie, Matzel Louis D
Department of Psychology, Program in Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, United States.
Department of Psychology, Program in Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, United States.
Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2014 Dec;116:181-92. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2014.10.005. Epub 2014 Oct 24.
Attention is a component of the working memory system, and is responsible for protecting task-relevant information from interference. Cognitive performance (particularly outside of the laboratory) is often plagued by interference, and the source of this interference, either external or internal, might influence the expression of individual differences in attentional ability. By definition, external attention (also described as "selective attention") protects working memory against sensorial distractors of all kinds, while internal attention (also called "inhibition") protects working memory against emotional impulses, irrelevant information from memory, and automatically-generated responses. At present, it is unclear if these two types of attention are expressed independently in non-human animals, and how they might differentially impact performance on other cognitive processes, such as learning. By using a diverse battery of four attention tests (with varying levels of internal and external sources of interference), here we aimed both to explore this issue, and to obtain a robust and general (less task-specific) measure of attention in mice. Exploratory factor analyses revealed two factors (external and internal attention) that in total, accounted for 73% of the variance in attentional performance. Confirmatory factor analyses found an excellent fit with the data of the model of attention that assumed an external and internal distinction (with a resulting correlation of 0.43). In contrast, a model of attention that assumed one source of variance (i.e., "general attention") exhibited a poor fit with the data. Regarding the relationship between attention and learning, higher resistance against external sources of interference promoted better new learning, but tended to impair performance when cognitive flexibility was required, such as during the reversal of a previously instantiated response. The present results suggest that there can be (at least) two types of attention that contribute to the common variance in attentional performance in mice, and that external and internal attentions might have opposing influences on the rate at which animals learn.
注意力是工作记忆系统的一个组成部分,负责保护与任务相关的信息免受干扰。认知表现(尤其是在实验室之外)常常受到干扰的困扰,而这种干扰的来源,无论是外部的还是内部的,都可能影响注意力能力个体差异的表现。根据定义,外部注意力(也被描述为“选择性注意力”)保护工作记忆免受各种感官干扰物的影响,而内部注意力(也称为“抑制”)保护工作记忆免受情绪冲动、来自记忆的无关信息以及自动产生的反应的影响。目前,尚不清楚这两种注意力在非人类动物中是否独立表现,以及它们如何可能对其他认知过程(如学习)的表现产生不同影响。通过使用一系列多样的四项注意力测试(具有不同程度的内部和外部干扰源),我们在此旨在探讨这个问题,并获得对小鼠注意力的一种稳健且通用(较少任务特异性)的测量方法。探索性因素分析揭示了两个因素(外部注意力和内部注意力),它们总共解释了注意力表现中73%的方差。验证性因素分析发现与假设存在外部和内部区分的注意力模型的数据拟合良好(结果相关性为0.43)。相比之下,假设只有一个方差来源(即“一般注意力”)的注意力模型与数据拟合不佳。关于注意力与学习之间的关系,对外部干扰源具有更高的抵抗力促进了更好的新学习,但在需要认知灵活性时,例如在先前建立的反应逆转期间,往往会损害表现。目前的结果表明,(至少)可能有两种注意力有助于小鼠注意力表现中的共同方差,并且外部和内部注意力可能对动物学习的速度产生相反的影响。