Effect of muscarinic blockade on the speed of attention shifting, read-out delays and learning
Alexander Thiele, Agnes McDonald Milner, Corwyn Hall, Lucy Mayhew, Anthony Carter, Sidharth Sanjeev

TL;DR
This study shows that blocking muscarinic receptors slows attention shifts and learning to read cues, especially when attention is pre-allocated.
Contribution
The novel finding is that muscarinic blockade impairs both cue detection and learning of attentional processes.
Findings
Scopolamine increased readout delays, especially for pre-cue conditions.
Muscarinic blockade reduced learning-dependent improvements in cue detection and readout.
Endogenous attention shifts were slower than exogenous ones.
Abstract
The study aimed to investigate to what extent blockade of muscarinic receptors affects the speed of endogenous versus exogenous attentional shift times, and how it affects learning of attention shifting, cue detection and signal readout. Subjects viewed an array of 10 moving clocks and reported the time a clock indicated when cued. Target clocks were indicated by peripheral or central cues, including conditions of pre-cuing. For peripheral and central cuing, it yielded a compound measure of how long it took to detect the cue, shift attention to the relevant clock and read the time on the clock. For the pre-cue condition it yielded a measure of how long it took to detect the cue and read the time on the clock when attention could have been pre-allocated to the target clock. In study 1, each subject participated in 2 sessions (scopolamine/placebo), whereby the order of drug intake was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMemory and Neural Mechanisms · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling
