ePoster

RARE TARGET PROBABILITY ENHANCES CM–PF ERP AMPLITUDES WHILE REDUCING BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES IN RATS PERFORMING A THREE-CLASS AUDITORY ODDBALL PARADIGM

Amir H. Akbarzadehand 5 co-authors

Hannover Medical School

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS01-07AM-607

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS01-07AM-607

Poster preview

RARE TARGET PROBABILITY ENHANCES CM–PF ERP AMPLITUDES WHILE REDUCING BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES IN RATS PERFORMING A THREE-CLASS AUDITORY ODDBALL PARADIGM poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS01-07AM-607

Abstract

The three-class auditory oddball paradigm, in which participants must respond to rare target tones amongst frequent standard and rare distractor tones, enables the study of sensory processing, attentional control, and decision-making processes. The thalamic centromedian-parafascicular (CM-Pf) complex regulates attention and salience by acting as a filter for 'important events'. This study examined how intertrial interval (ITI) length and target tone presentation probability influence behavior and neural response of the CM-Pf.
Male Sprague–Dawley rats (n=10) were trained to respond to rare target tones (5000 Hz) while ignoring rare distractor (1500 Hz) and frequent standard tones (3000 Hz). Following training, electrodes were implanted in a stereotaxic surgery under anesthesia into the CM-Pf to record local field potentials (LFPs) and extract ERPs. Experimental sessions varied in the proportion of target tones (5% vs. 20%) and in the length of the ITI (short: ~0.1sec vs. long: ~9sec). CM-Pf LFPs were recorded during behavioral testing.
Correct response rate to targets was lower when the targets were rare (5%) than when they were more frequent (20%) among the standard tones (p<0.05). Low performance was accompanied by higher early and late ERP amplitudes in the CM-Pf (p<0.05). Behavioral performance was best with long ITI accompanied by 20% target probability (p<0.05) with no effect on early and late ERP amplitude.
Our findings indicate that target occurrence and ITI length modulates behavioral performance and neural processing within the CM-Pf. Together, these results provide a translational framework for probing neurophysiological mechanisms of attention and stimulus evaluation.

Recommended posters

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.