Publication Details and Core Discovery
A new study published on 25 June 2026 in Cell details how a specific population of neurons in the basal forebrain supports the ability to maintain focus over time. The paper, titled A disinhibitory basal forebrain-to-cortex projection supports sustained attention, appears in Volume 189, Issue 13, pages 4140-4158.e9. Lead authors include Shu-Jing Li, Balazs Hangya, Unmukt Gupta, Harjot Singh, Kyle B. Fischer, James Fitzhugh Sturgill, Edward M. Callaway, and senior author Adam Kepecs.
Background on Sustained Attention and the Basal Forebrain
Sustained attention allows individuals to remain vigilant and detect relevant signals amid distractions, a process essential for everyday tasks and survival. Traditional views centered on cholinergic neurons in the basal forebrain as primary drivers of attention. However, recent recordings indicated these cells mainly track arousal and surprise rather than moment-to-moment performance fluctuations. Researchers therefore examined parvalbumin-expressing inhibitory neurons in the basal forebrain, known as BF-PV cells, which also project to the cortex and influence cortical rhythms.
Key Experimental Approaches in the Study
The team combined multiple techniques in mice performing an attention-demanding task. Fiber photometry tracked BF-PV activity in real time. Optogenetic activation and inhibition tested causal roles. Anatomical tracing mapped topographic projections from BF-PV neurons to cortical areas. Recordings showed these cells respond to motivationally salient events such as predictive cues, outcomes, and surprises, independent of positive or negative valence. A computational model linked these signals to attention allocation.
Primary Findings on Neural Activity and Performance
BF-PV activity predicted trial-by-trial variations in reaction time and accuracy during the task. Activation of the cells improved attentional performance, while inhibition impaired it. The neurons target cortical parvalbumin-positive interneurons, resulting in disinhibition that amplifies sensory signals and enhances detection sensitivity. This mechanism provides a long-range pathway for regulating cortical gain according to motivational salience.
Implications for Cognitive Neuroscience Research
The identification of this disinhibitory circuit offers a new framework for understanding how the brain sustains attention despite fluctuating internal states. It separates the contributions of different basal forebrain cell types and highlights how inhibitory projections can produce net excitatory effects on cortical processing. Such insights advance models of attention that integrate motivational signals with sensory gain control.
Further details appear in the full paper available at the ScienceDirect page for the Cell publication. An earlier preprint version is hosted on bioRxiv.
Connections to Neurological and Psychiatric Conditions
Attentional lapses feature prominently in conditions including Alzheimer’s disease, schizophrenia, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. By clarifying a circuit that supports sustained focus, the work provides a potential target for future investigations into circuit-level disruptions in these disorders. It also refines understanding of why broad cholinergic interventions have shown mixed results in clinical settings.
Research Team and Institutional Context
Shu-Jing Li serves as a senior scientist in the Kepecs laboratory within the Department of Neuroscience at Washington University in St. Louis. Adam Kepecs holds positions as Professor of Neuroscience and Professor of Psychiatry at the same institution. Balazs Hangya, previously affiliated with the Institute of Experimental Medicine in Budapest, recently assumed a professorship in neurophysiology at the Medical University of Vienna. Additional contributors include researchers from the Salk Institute for Biological Studies. These cross-institutional collaborations underscore the collaborative nature of modern systems neuroscience.
Broader Impact on the Field and Research Careers
Publications in high-impact journals such as Cell frequently shape funding priorities and training programs in neuroscience. The detailed circuit mapping and computational integration demonstrated here exemplify the multi-method approaches now standard in leading laboratories. Early-career researchers interested in attention, neuromodulation, or optogenetic techniques may find expanded opportunities in labs pursuing related questions about cortical dynamics and motivational processing.
Future Research Directions
Outstanding questions include how BF-PV activity interacts with other neuromodulatory systems during extended tasks and whether similar mechanisms operate in primates or humans. Longitudinal studies could examine whether alterations in this pathway precede cognitive decline in aging populations. Integration with human neuroimaging may bridge rodent findings to clinical applications.
Photo by National Cancer Institute on Unsplash
Resources for Academics and Job Seekers
University departments and research institutes continue to recruit faculty, postdoctoral fellows, and research assistants specializing in systems neuroscience and cognitive processes. Positions often emphasize expertise in circuit-level analysis, behavioral modeling, and translational relevance to disorders of attention and cognition.
