Dopamine-mediated stabilization of delay-period activity in a network model of prefrontal cortex (2000)
| Venue: | Journal of Neurophysiology |
| Citations: | 22 - 0 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Durstewitz00dopamine-mediatedstabilization,
author = {Daniel Durstewitz and Jeremy K. Seamans and Terrence J. Sejnowski and Jeremy K. Seamans and Terrence J. Sejnowski},
title = {Dopamine-mediated stabilization of delay-period activity in a network model of prefrontal cortex},
journal = {Journal of Neurophysiology},
year = {2000},
pages = {1733--1750}
}
Years of Citing Articles
OpenURL
Abstract
Dopamine-mediated stabilization of delay-period activity in a network model of prefrontal cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 1733–1750, 2000. The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is critically involved in working memory, which underlies memory-guided, goal-directed behavior. During working-memory tasks, PFC neurons exhibit sustained elevated activity, which may reflect the active holding of goal-related information or the preparation of forthcoming actions. Dopamine via the D1 receptor strongly modulates both this sustained (delay-period) activity and behavioral performance in working-memory tasks. However, the function of dopamine during delay-period activity and the underlying neural mechanisms are only poorly understood. Recently we proposed that dopamine might stabilize active neural representations in PFC circuits during tasks involving working memory and render them robust against interfering stimuli and noise. To further test this idea and to examine the dopamine-modulated ionic currents







