Chemical in Brain May Be Part of Basis for Visual Attention
By James Devitt
The study’s lead author, Anita Disney, is
a post-doctoral fellow at NYU’s Center for Neural Science (CNS). The work’s
other authors are Chiye Aoki and Michael J. Hawken, both faculty members at
CNS.
To examine the effect of ACh, the
researchers looked at the brain’s nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChR), to
which ACh binds to stimulate neural activity. Nicotinic receptors are named for
the fact that they also bind nicotine, the addictive chemical in cigarettes.
ACh is a neurotransmitter—a chemical used to relay, amplify, and modulate
signals between neurons and between neurons and other cells. Previous
scholarship had shown that ACh enhances attention in rodents, but the precise
mechanisms behind these enhancements are not understood.
In this study, the researchers found that
information that comes into the brain’s visual cortex can be selectively
enhanced by mimicking the effects of ACh with nicotine, resulting in the
ability of neurons to detect and to signal stimuli that, without ACh’s
enhancement, were below detection threshold.
“That’s what attention does—it strengthens
the signal you’re interested in and that strengthening helps you filter out
other things” said Disney “Our findings show that acetylcholine has the ability
to turn up the volume on visual activity, just like attention does.”
Disney added that the study sheds
additional light on the function of our cholinergic system, a system of nerve
cells dependent on ACh as their neurotransmitters. In Alzheimer’s patients, the
cells in the cholinergic system have been damaged.

