The orientating reflex: The "targeting reaction" and "searchlight of attention"

被引:30
作者
Sokolov E.N. [1 ]
Nezlina N.I. [1 ]
Polyanskii V.B. [1 ]
Evtikhin D.V. [1 ]
机构
[1] M. V. Lomonosov. Moscow State Univ., Moscow
基金
俄罗斯基础研究基金会;
关键词
Visual System; Superior Colliculus; Synaptic Weighting; Neural Model; Standard Stimulus;
D O I
10.1023/A:1015820025297
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A concept of the orientating reflex is presented, based on the principle of vector coding of cognitive and executive processes. The orientating reflex is a complex of orientating reactions of motor, autonomic, and subjective types, accentuating new and significant stimuli. Two main systems form the orientating reflex: the "targeting reaction" and the "searchlight of attention." In the visual system, the targeting reaction ensures that the image of the object falls onto the fovea; this is mediated by involvement of premotor neurons which are excited by saccade command neurons in the superior colliculi. The "searchlight of attention" is activated as a result of resonance within the gamma frequency range, selectively enhancing cortical detectors and involving the reticular nucleus of the thalamus. Novelty signals arise in novelty neurons of the hippocampus. The synaptic weightings of neocortical detectors for hippocampal novelty neurons is initially characterized by high efficiency, which assigns a significant level of excitation of these neurons to the new stimulus. During repeated stimulation, the synaptic weightings of all the detectors representing a given stimulus decrease, with the result that the novelty signal becomes weaker. When the stimulus changes, it acts on other detectors, whose weightings for novelty neurons remain high, which strengthens the novelty signal. Decreases in the synaptic weightings on repetition of a standard stimulus form a trace of this stimulus in the novelty neurons - this is the "neural model of the stimulus." The novelty signal is determined by the non-concordance of the new stimulus with this "neural model," which is formed under the influence of the standard stimulus. The greater the difference between the new stimulus and the previously formed neural model, the stronger the novelty signal.
引用
收藏
页码:347 / 362
页数:15
相关论文
共 75 条
[1]  
Anokhin P.K., Biology and Neurophysiology of the Conditioned Reflex, (1968)
[2]  
Anokhin K.V., Ryabinin A.E., Sudakov K.V., Expression of the c-fos gene in the mouse brain and the dynamics of defensive behavior habit acquisition, Zh. Vyssh. Nerv. Deyat., 50, 1, pp. 88-94, (2000)
[3]  
Verkhlyumov V.M., Bark E.D., Shevelev I.A., Et al., Dynamic localization of a dipole alpha rhythm source in the human brain, Zh. Vyssh. Nerv. Deyat., 49, 1, pp. 3-11, (1999)
[4]  
Vinogradova O.S., The Hippocampus and Memory, (1975)
[5]  
Vinogradova O.S., Neuroscience at the end of the second millennium: A paradigm shift, Zh. Vyssh. Nerv. Deyat., 50, 5, pp. 743-774, (2000)
[6]  
Ivanitskii A.M., Information synthesis in the key areas of the cortex as the basis for subjective experience, Zh. Vyssh. Nerv. Deyat., 47, 2, pp. 209-227, (1997)
[7]  
Kravkov S.V., The Eye and Its Function, (1950)
[8]  
Luriya A.R., Higher Cortical Functions and Their Derangement in Local Brain Lesions, (1962)
[9]  
Pavlov I.P., Essays on the Functions of the Cerebral Hemispheres, (1947)
[10]  
Simonov P.V., Essays on the Function of the Brain, (1998)