» Articles » PMID: 8647041

Alerting Effects on Choice Reaction Time and the Photic Eyeblink Reflex

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialties Neurology
Physiology
Date 1996 May 1
PMID 8647041
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

To test the possibility that a common mechanism might be responsible for alerting effects on voluntary and reflexive reactions, choice reaction times (RT) to intense flashes of light were compared with eyeblink reflexes simultaneously evoked by those stimuli. An acoustic accessory stimulus, irrelevant to the RT task, facilitated both voluntary and reflexive reactions. A time uncertainty manipulation also generated facilitation of both responses under conditions in which phasic arousal was presumably greatest. However, there were several dissociations between alerting effects on voluntary and reflexive reactions and between effects on the early and late subcomponents of the photic orbicularis oculi reflex. In conjunction with other research in humans and animals, these data support the assumption that alerting involves the activation of multiple neuromodulatory (e.g. monoamine) systems, each of which is characterized by a distinct behavioral, neuropharmacological, and electrophysiological profile.

Citing Articles

Arousal facilitates involuntary eye movements.

DiGirolamo G, Patel N, Blaukopf C Exp Brain Res. 2016; 234(7):1967-1976.

PMID: 26928432 PMC: 4893927. DOI: 10.1007/s00221-016-4599-3.


Accessory stimulus modulates executive function during stepping task.

Watanabe T, Koyama S, Tanabe S, Nojima I J Neurophysiol. 2015; 114(1):419-26.

PMID: 25925321 PMC: 4509393. DOI: 10.1152/jn.00222.2015.


The effects of alerting signals in action control: activation of S-R associations or inhibition of executive control processes?.

Fischer R, Plessow F, Kiesel A Psychol Res. 2011; 76(3):317-28.

PMID: 21667175 DOI: 10.1007/s00426-011-0350-7.


The locus of temporal preparation effects: evidence from the psychological refractory period paradigm.

Bausenhart K, Rolke B, Hackley S, Ulrich R Psychon Bull Rev. 2006; 13(3):536-42.

PMID: 17048743 DOI: 10.3758/bf03193882.