Abstract

The amplitude of the acoustic startle reflex can be reduced reliably when preceded at short intervals by a weak stimulus (prepulse) which itself does not elicit startle. The magnitude of this prepulse inhibition effect is attenuated by several dopamine agonists, such as apomorphine, especially when there is a relatively small difference between the intensity of the prepulse and the intensity of the background noise over which the prepulse is superimposed. One goal of the present experiment was to test the generality of this disruptive effect of apomorphine on prepulse inhibition by using either an auditory prepulse that included both a change in intensity and a change in frequency relative to the background noise or a visual prepulse stimulus. Apomorphine reduced auditory prepulse inhibition when induced by a small change in stimulus intensity, but not when induced by a change in both intensity and frequency. Apomorphine consistently reduced visual prepulse inhibition with a complete blockade at 100-ms test interval. However, it did not fully block the usual reduction in startle onset latency or even attenuate the increase in startle amplitude when a visual prepulse was presented 5, 10 or 15 ms before the startle stimulus. Consistent with conclusions from other laboratories using auditory prepulse inhibition, these data suggest that apomorphine did not prevent the animal from detecting prepulse presentation under conditions where the drug completely blocked prepulse inhibition. Moreover, they indicate that the blockade of prepulse inhibition by apomorphine was independent of prepulse modality, adding generality to the original finding. Visual prepulse inhibition may be a useful alternative procedure for evaluating the effects of drugs on this attentional process.

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