PROBING CLAUSTRO-CORTICAL COORDINATION USING A MODULAR AUDITORY ATTENTIONAL SET-SHIFTING TASK
The Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS07-10AM-494
Poster
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To address this question, we are developing a fully automated auditory attentional set-shifting task (aASST) with a modular architecture that allows independent manipulation of sensory features, decision rules, and response mappings. In this task, mice discriminate between two abstract auditory dimensions, pitch or temporal structure (pip rate), and update the relevant dimension following rule changes. Task structure follows the canonical attentional set-shifting sequence, progressing from simple feature discrimination to compound discrimination, intra-dimensional shifts, extra-dimensional shifts, and reversals. This progression allows dissociation of set acquisition, set maintenance, and set shifting under controlled changes in task demands. The task is implemented in an RFID-gated home-cage system, enabling unsupervised training and fine-grained trial-by-trial behavioral tracking across circadian cycles.
This modular design enables controlled variation of task demands while preserving the core computational requirements of set formation and updating. As such, the aASST provides a flexible experimental framework for comparing how prefrontal circuits are engaged across task instantiations and for testing hypotheses that the claustrum coordinates interactions between prefrontal regions as task structure and control demands are reconfigured.
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