4.7 Article

Rapid prefrontal-hippocampal habituation to novel events

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 23, Pages 5356-5363

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4587-03.2004

Keywords

orienting response; novelty detection; event-related fMRI; single trial analysis; visual attention; limbic system

Categories

Funding

  1. NIMH NIH HHS [F31 MH063548, MH63548] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [P0 NS40813, R37 NS021135, R56 NS021135, P01 NS040813, R01 NS021135, NS21135] Funding Source: Medline

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Unexpected novel events generate an orienting response that plays an important role in some forms of learning and memory. The orienting response involuntarily captures attention and rapidly habituates as events become familiarized. Although evidence from patients with focal lesions and scalp and intracranial event-related brain potential recordings supports the involvement of a distributed neural network involving association cortex and the limbic system in novelty detection, the key neural substrates and temporal dynamics have not been defined. While subjects performed a bi-field visual-selective attention task with random novel stimuli embedded in either attended or unattended visual fields, we measured rapid changes of regional blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal to target and novel stimuli using single-trial analysis of event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging with a 4T scanner. Habituation was quantified by serial BOLD signal changes during the first 10 novel stimuli for each subject. Novel stimuli activated the bilateral superior/middle frontal gyrus, temporal-parietal junction, superior parietal lobe, cingulate gyrus, hippocampus, and fusiform gyrus. The superior/middle frontal gyrus and hippocampus showed significant reduction of BOLD signal during the first few novel stimuli, whereas the signals in the fusiform and cingulate gyrus were constant. Prefrontal and hippocampal responses to attended and unattended novel stimuli were comparably habituated. These results, and previous data from lesion studies, support the view that prefrontal and hippocampal regions are involved in rapid automatic detection and habituation to unexpected environmental events and are key elements of the orienting response in humans.

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