Attention
refers to our ability to filter out irrelevant sensory inputs, like sights,
sounds, touch and smell, to effectively process information needed for our
current goals. Attention is critical for almost every aspect of our daily life
and throughout our development, from the classroom, to the job force, to
interpersonal relationships. Despite its importance, we still know very little
about the cells and circuits that support its function within the brain. Recent
advances in genetic approaches allow us discern the role of specific circuits
in behavior enabling researchers to create new circuit maps of the important
brain structures involved in attention. We can begin building these maps in the
mouse, where our lab has recently developed approaches for assessing attention
and other types of cognition while recording from or manipulating activity in
circuits of interest.
The
prefrontal cortex (PFC) is a brain region that has been identified as a
critical hub in attention across species, and is linked to cognitive
impairments in several neurodevelopmental disorders. Two major sources of
inputs to the PFC have also been linked to attention, the mediodorsal thalamus
(MD) and the claustrum. Projections from these regions synapse onto separate
neurons and different cortical layers suggesting they play distinct roles in
shaping PFC activity during attention. In the proposed studies, we will measure
and manipulate activity in these separate projections to PFC in mice while they
perform attention assays to determine their roles in attention. Our research
will lay the groundwork for future exploration of how activity in these pathways
change in mice with genetic mutations found in children with neurodevelopmental
disorders with comorbid attention dysfunction. The results from our studies
will help us work towards identifying novel circuit biomarkers for attention
dysfunction.