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1.
Int J Cosmet Sci ; 24(3): 135-50, 2002 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18498506

ABSTRACT

Tactile properties of cosmetic products constitute weak stimuli and thus can be expected to be easily modified by mental images. In order to enhance an intended positive-emotion-inducing effect of such a product, its experience can be embedded in a certain 'world' that generates a positive emotional imagination. The present study investigated such an influence in 12 males and 12 females, half of each being laymen and experts in sensory assessment. Two product worlds (emotional and technical) and three different hair samples, two of them treated with different shampoos and an untreated one as control, were presented to each subject in counter-balanced order of all six combinations. An objective emotional assessment using a psychophysiological technique developed in an earlier study was applied and compared with a traditional sensory assessment. Among the physiological measures, peripheral blood volume and facial muscular activity were the most sensitive in revealing effects of and interactions between the product worlds and hair samples. A multivariate evaluation of the physiological data revealed three discriminant functions that explained 78.4% of the total variance and enabled a re-classification considerably better than chance. The first discriminant function clearly separated the treated from the untreated hair samples which was not possible by subjective ratings or traditional sensory assessment. The two other discriminant functions comprised a hedonistic and a product world factor. The emotional product world exerted the largest influence in case of the weakest tactile differences between the hair samples, and its influence was larger on laymen than on experts. Gender effects were most prominent in the subjective domain. In conclusion, multivariate psychophysiological methodology is superior to traditional sensory assessment in revealing subtle differences in the tactile perception of cosmetic products.

2.
Integr Physiol Behav Sci ; 36(2): 137-53, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11666042

ABSTRACT

A framework for accounting for emotional phenomena proposed by Sokolov and Boucsein (2000) employs conceptual dimensions that parallel those of hue, brightness, and saturation in color vision. The approach that employs the concepts of emotional quality. intensity, and saturation has been supported by psychophysical emotional scaling data gathered from a few trained observers. We report cortical evoked potential data obtained during the change between different emotions expressed in schematic faces. Twenty-five subjects (13 male, 12 female) were presented with a positive, a negative, and a neutral computer-generated face with random interstimulus intervals in a within-subjects design, together with four meaningful and four meaningless control stimuli made up from the same elements. Frontal, central, parietal, and temporal ERPs were recorded from each hemisphere. Statistically significant outcomes in the P300 and N200 range support the potential fruitfulness of the proposed color-vision-model-based approach to human emotional space.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Color Perception/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Event-Related Potentials, P300/physiology , Adult , Color , Electroencephalography , Electrooculography , Female , Functional Laterality , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Photic Stimulation
3.
Int J Psychophysiol ; 40(3): 221-32, 2001 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11228349

ABSTRACT

A cybernetic model of behavior predicts that team performance may depend on physiological compliance among participants. This laboratory study tested if compliance in electrodermal activity (EDA), heart rate or breathing in two-person teams (N=16) was predictive of team performance or coordination in a continuous tracking task simulating teleoperation. Visual contact among participants was manipulated. Physiological compliance was scored with weighted coherence and cross correlation. Separate multiple regression analyses revealed that the task completion time was predicted by coherence measures for EDA and heart, but only at a trend level for breathing. Task completion time was also predicted by heart cross correlation. Team tracking error was predicted by coherence measures for EDA, heart and breathing, and also heart cross correlation. While social-visual contact did not have an impact, physiological compliance was predictive of improved performance, with coherence robust over all three physiological measures. Heart cross correlation showed the strongest predictive relationships. These results provide evidence that physiological compliance among team members may benefit team performance. While further study is needed, physiological compliance may someday provide a needed tool for the study of team work, and an objective means to guide the ergonomic design of complex sociotechnical systems requiring a high degree of team proficiency.


Subject(s)
Cooperative Behavior , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Social Behavior , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Male , Regression Analysis , Respiratory Mechanics/physiology
4.
Int J Psychophysiol ; 40(3): vii-ix, 2001 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11228352
5.
Integr Physiol Behav Sci ; 35(2): 81-119, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11021336

ABSTRACT

Despite a wide variety of emotions that can be subjectively experienced, the emotion space has consistently revealed a low dimensionality. The search for corresponding somato-visceral response patterns has been only moderately successful. The authors suggest a solution based on an assumed parallelism between emotion coding and color coding. According to the color detection model proposed by Sokolov and co-workers, neurons responsible for color detection are triggered by a combination of excitations in a limited number of input cells. Similarly, a limited number of input channels may feed complex emotion detectors being located on a hypersphere in a four-dimensional emotion space, the three angles of which correspond to emotional tone, intensity, and saturation, in parallel to hue, lightness, and saturation in color perception. The existence of such a four-dimensional emotion space in the subjective domain is shown by using schematic facial expressions as stimuli. A neurophysiological model is provided in which reticular, hypothalamic, and limbic structures constitute input channels of an emotion detecting system, thus acting as the first layer of emotion predetectors. Hypothalamic neurons with differential sensitivity for various transmitters may elicit a subsequent selective activation in a second layer of predetectors at the thalamic level. The latter are suggested to trigger emotion detectors located in cortical areas, the action of which should be revealed by measures of central nervous system activity. Preliminary results from evoked potential studies show that switching between schematic faces that express different emotions may be used as an objective measure for establishing a psychophysiological emotion space.


Subject(s)
Emotions/physiology , Models, Psychological , Psychophysiology , Expressed Emotion/physiology , Humans , Psychophysics , Social Perception
6.
Integr Physiol Behav Sci ; 35(1): 17-34, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10885545

ABSTRACT

Numerous studies have indicated that, consistent with current "cognitive" accounts of information processing, human Pavlovian autonomic discrimination acquisition cannot occur without awareness of the CS-US relationship. However, extinction studies have suggested that awareness is not necessary, findings that, in information-processing terms, have been explained by assuming that the processing by the extinction stage is parallel (automatic) rather than serial (controlled). This explanation was tested in an 80-subject study. The first, acquisition phase was a standard semantic differential conditioning arrangement with a 96-db white noise as US, and a "long" CS-US interval of 8 s, with ten trials each of CS+ (paired with US) and CS- (unpaired) trials. In extinction (USs omitted), in order to obtain non-autonomic indices of processing and thereby test the information-processing account of "unaware" autonomic conditioning during extinction, a dichotic listening task was implemented, with the CSs presented in the unattended channel (ear), while the subject had to perform a semantic differential reaction task in an attended-to channel (other ear). In early extinction, the electrodermal response occurring at an interval of 9-15 s after CS onset (i.e., following placement of the US during acquisition) and the finger-pulse-volume response occurring at an interval of 4-11 s after CS onset both showed reliable conditioning, but reaction-time and subjective-report data for the recognized critical words indicated serial rather than parallel processing of the CSs during extinction.


Subject(s)
Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Awareness/physiology , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Dichotic Listening Tests , Extinction, Psychological/physiology , Learning/physiology , Adult , Female , Fingers/blood supply , Functional Laterality/physiology , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Humans , Male , Pulse , Regional Blood Flow/physiology
7.
Psychophysiology ; 37(1): 85-91, 2000 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10705770

ABSTRACT

If electrodermal activity is recorded with direct current, constant voltage and constant current measurements result in different dependencies of electrodermal reactions on the actual electrodermal level. The present study demonstrates empirically that such a problem does not exist when instead the phase angle changes between alternating current and voltage are obtained. Forty subjects were subjected to a 20-trial habituation series on two different occasions, in which electrodermal level variations were induced by room temperature changes. A multiplexing system was used to enable quasi-simultaneous constant current and constant voltage recording under both direct and alternating current measurement conditions. If the alternating current technique was applied and electrodermal responses were expressed as changes of phase angle between voltage and current, electrodermal recordings with constant voltage and with constant current provided equivalent results, even if electrodermal levels were considerably different. Therefore, using the phase angle method instead of the conventional direct current methods will finally resolve the problem of differential level dependency in electrodermal recording. A further advantage will be that electrode and skin polarization are prevented by the use of alternating current.


Subject(s)
Electric Stimulation , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Electrophysiology/instrumentation , Humans , Skin Physiological Phenomena
8.
Psychophysiology ; 36(4): 453-63, 1999 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10432794

ABSTRACT

The effects of stimulus intensity, duration, and risetime on the autonomic and behavioral components of orienting, startle, and defense responses were investigated. Six groups of 10 students were presented with 15 white noise stimuli at either 60 or 100 dB, with controlled risetimes of either 5 or 200 ms, and at stimulus durations of 1 or 5 s (1 s only in the case of the 60-dB groups). A dishabituation stimulus consisting of a 1000 Hz tone was also presented. Measures consisted of skin conductance and heart rate, together with ratings of facial expressions and upper torso movement obtained using video recording. Increased intensity resulted in greater amplitudes and frequencies of electrodermal and behavioral responses, and a change from cardiac deceleration to acceleration. Faster risetimes elicited larger electrodermal responses, greater frequencies of eye-blinks, head and body movements, and larger cardiac accelerations. The effects of duration for the 100-dB stimuli were less clear-cut. Overall, the results are discussed in relation to the differentiation of orienting, startle, and defense responses.


Subject(s)
Acoustic Stimulation , Attention/physiology , Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Habituation, Psychophysiologic/physiology , Orientation/physiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Emotions/physiology , Facial Expression , Female , Humans , Male , Psychoacoustics , Time Factors
9.
Ergonomics ; 41(5): 634-48, 1998 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9613224

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to compare a traditional stress setting, consisting of two mental arithmetic tasks and two Stroop test modifications, and a stress setting of varying task demand and decision latitude according to Karasek's job strain model, with respect to their feasibility to elicit differences in cardiovascular reactivity and recovery in 20 normotensives, 20 borderline hypertensives, and 20 non-medicated hypertensives, carefully selected by means of World Health Organization criteria. In addition, the relationship between laboratory and everyday blood pressure was investigated. All subjects were tested under both stress settings in counterbalanced order. Blood pressure was recorded both intermittently from the brachial artery (Riva-Rocci) and continuously from the finger (Finapres). Heart rate and electrodermal activity were continuously measured as well. Furthermore, daily life blood pressure recorded by means of 24 h ambulatory monitoring during a normal working day served as criterion for the re-classification of the blood pressure groups by means of discriminant analysis using physiological recordings from baseline, test phases and rest phases. The groups did not show significant differences in their reactivity to the various mental stressors including the Karasek-model oriented ones but marked differences in their behaviour occurred during the 10 min of recovery following each stress setting. Both systolic and diastolic blood pressure in hypertensives failed to recover during this period. The results also showed the superiority of the Finapres method with respect to reflecting the dynamics of physiological recovery processes. None of the stress settings showed an advantage in predicting blood pressure in daily life. In general, the results question the validity of mental laboratory stressors for the prediction of cardiovascular changes in daily life but point to a possible role of recovery processes after stress in the development of essential hypertension.


Subject(s)
Blood Pressure , Hypertension/psychology , Stress, Psychological , Task Performance and Analysis , Adult , Female , Humans , Male
10.
Integr Physiol Behav Sci ; 32(3): 247-56, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9322114

ABSTRACT

Although learning without awareness conflicts with recent theories of classical human Pavlovian conditioning, there is at least one type of conditioning in which CS-US contingency is processed without awareness--the so-called prepared conditioning. Therefore, presenting a secondary reaction time probe to measure the amount of information processing capacity required should produce interference with the secondary task in unprepared, but not in prepared conditioning, since in the latter information should be processed in parallel. In a previous study, the authors could not find differences between both types of conditioning, neither in reaction time nor in electrodermal indicators of information processing. The present study was conducted to replicate and extend these findings, using a differential autonomic conditioning paradigm. One half of 42 subjects received spider and snake slides as prepared stimuli, while the other half received flower slides as unprepared stimuli. Both kinds of stimuli were used as CS+ and as CS-. An electric shock served as unconditioned stimulus. During 24 acquisition and 24 extinction trials, electrodermal and heart rate responses, as well as reaction times to probe stimulus were recorded. The results revealed significant conditioning effects in terms of CS-/CS+ differences. However, no differences were found between prepared and unprepared stimuli, neither in autonomic measures nor in reaction time. Again, our results are in favor of serial information processing in both prepared and unprepared stimuli, suggesting that the so-called prepared conditioning may be treated as a subclass of classical autonomic conditioning instead of forming a specific class of learning.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Attention/physiology , Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Fear/physiology , Adult , Animals , Association Learning/physiology , Awareness/physiology , Female , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Male , Mental Recall/physiology , Reaction Time/physiology , Snakes , Spiders
11.
Biol Psychol ; 42(3): 301-22, 1996 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8652750

ABSTRACT

The influence of night-shift work and noise on arousal and stress reactions have, to date, been investigated separately. The aim of this study was to compare their psychophysiological effects in combination. Twenty-four male student subjects continuously performed ten hours of visual display tasks per 24 h under highly controlled conditions for either five consecutive day or night shifts, followed by two days of rest. Each group worked in conditions of simulated traffic noise, at either 80 or 50 dB(A). Urinary catecholamines, electrodermal activity, heart rate, and ratings of mood and physical symptoms were recorded continuously or at specified intervals. Catecholamine excretion rates, autonomic reactions, reaction times, and ratings of subjective alertness showed changes typical for night-shift work. No main effects of noise were found, but significant interactions between the two experimental factors reflected differential actions of noise dependent on the type of shift. The results favor a multiple-arousal concept. Night-shift work primarily influences general arousal, while noise affects both general and goal-directed arousal, dependent on the presentation during day or night shift.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Noise, Transportation/adverse effects , Stress, Psychological/complications , Work Schedule Tolerance , Workload/psychology , Adult , Affect/physiology , Attention/physiology , Catecholamines/urine , Computer Terminals , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Male , Psychophysiology
12.
Wien Med Wochenschr ; 146(13-14): 294-5, 1996.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9012158

ABSTRACT

We investigated the effect of SAS on the long term memory in PD patients and compared them with patients with brain infarction or cataract (control group), respectively. PD patients develop SAS and cognitive impairments more often then healthy people. Since SAS leads to a fragmentation of the sleep structure it interferes with memory. Therefore SAS may be a pathogenic factor of cognitive impairment in PD. We studied 14 patients (7 with and 7 without SAS) with PD, brain infarction or cataract using the LGT-3, which measures the verbal, numeric and figural long term memory. All patients answered subtest 7 of the Wechsler-Memory-Scale at night and in the morning. The saving between the evening and morning measure was calculated. An analysis of variance was performed using the SAS-condition and the different groups as independent variable. A significant difference (p < or = 0.005) of all memory measurements between patients with and without SAS but not between the different groups has been proved with a superiority of the patients without SAS. A significant difference of the influence of the SAS for verbal memory score on patients with PD (pp < or = 0.05) and brain infarction (pp < or = 0.005) respectively and the control group could be demonstrated. Therefore we found a quantitative difference of memory consolidation in PD patients with SAS. The influence of SAS on memory in patients with neurological disease is more pronounced compared to the control group.


Subject(s)
Mental Recall , Parkinson Disease/psychology , Sleep Apnea Syndromes/psychology , Cataract/physiopathology , Cataract/psychology , Cerebral Infarction/physiopathology , Cerebral Infarction/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Recall/physiology , Neuropsychological Tests/statistics & numerical data , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Psychometrics , Reference Values , Retention, Psychology/physiology , Sleep Apnea Syndromes/physiopathology
13.
Ergonomics ; 38(7): 1342-51, 1995 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7635125

ABSTRACT

Involuntary delays in human-computer interaction, for example, system response times (SRTs) can increase stress. In the present study, 40 college-age subjects were randomly divided into an 'incentive' and a 'non-incentive' group'. Subjects performed a computer task with SRTs of 0.5, 1.5, and 4.5s. Physiological, subjective, and performance data were collected during the task. The computer task was designed to individually set difficulty level (i.e., mental strain), thus standardizing the task for all subjects. By using this procedure, changes resulting from SRT duration can be separated from the effects related to task difficulty. The results indicate that both short and long SRTs produced differential psychophysiological changes consistent with different types of stress responses. Short SRTs resulted in higher autonomic and somatic activity, increased positive self-reported emotional states but poorer performance. Long SRTs resulted in increased electrodermal activity, negative self-reported emotional states and better performance.


Subject(s)
Arousal , Attitude to Computers , Motivation , Reaction Time , User-Computer Interface , Workload/psychology , Adult , Emotions , Female , Galvanic Skin Response , Humans , Male
14.
Psychophysiology ; 32(4): 358-66, 1995 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7652112

ABSTRACT

The aim of the present study was to quantitatively investigate the role of information processing in conditioning using stimuli with varying amounts of information content. A letter reproduction task varying in complexity served as the unconditioned stimulus. In the first experiment, we tested the indicator function of electrodermal and cardiovascular variables. The amount of information processing resources required emerged most clearly in electrodermal reactions (EDRs), showing an increase with increasing stimulus information content. A second experiment was performed using the same design to confirm the role of processing resources allocation during conditioning by means of an independent indicator. A reaction time task was introduced as a measure of information processing resources utilized. The results paralleled the dependence of EDRs on stimulus information content, as was found in the first experiment.


Subject(s)
Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Conditioning, Psychological/physiology , Mental Processes/physiology , Adult , Female , Fingers/blood supply , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Male , Pulse/physiology , Regional Blood Flow/physiology
15.
Physiol Behav ; 55(6): 1101-8, 1994 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8047577

ABSTRACT

The aim of the present study was to investigate effects of instrumental control on the development of stress-induced gastric erosions by using a shuttle-box paradigm with yoked controls. In Experiment 1 the learning conditions had a reinforcement ratio of only 70% to increase stress during the short-term learning session. No significant differences of the mean cumulative length of gastric erosions between active avoiding and yoked groups were found. Experiment 2 tested three different reinforcement conditions (70%, 90%, 100%) with yoked groups. Again, no significant differences of the mean cumulative length of erosions between active avoiding and yoked control groups were obtained. Instead, the length of erosions decreased with increasing reinforcement. Taken together, the data show that the frequency of unavoided noxious stimuli as a function of the reinforcement schedule can be seen as a major influence on the development of gastric erosions in a shuttle-box paradigm.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Avoidance Learning/physiology , Internal-External Control , Social Environment , Stomach Ulcer/pathology , Stress, Psychological/complications , Animals , Escape Reaction/physiology , Feedback , Gastric Mucosa/pathology , Leukocyte Count , Male , Motivation , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Reinforcement Schedule , Stomach Ulcer/psychology
16.
Integr Physiol Behav Sci ; 29(2): 134-40, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7947328

ABSTRACT

One-trial learning referred to by Guthrie has been suggested to occur in autonomic conditioning, if the conditional stimuli (CSs) are so-called prepared ones. To test this idea, half of 28 subjects were given spider or snake slides as "prepared" CSs, while the remainder were given neutral slides as "unprepared" CSs. A shock was employed as the unconditional stimulus (UCS), with a CS-UCS interval of 8 seconds. Electrodermal activity and probe reaction times were the dependent measures of conditioning, conceived in cognitive, information-processing terms as the learning of the CS/UCS contingency. Evidence for the usual CS/UCS contingency learning emerged in both indicators, and during both acquisition and extinction, but none for one-trial learning, perhaps because the UCS was insufficiently aversive.


Subject(s)
Arousal , Attention , Conditioning, Classical , Fear , Galvanic Skin Response , Adult , Animals , Association Learning , Extinction, Psychological , Female , Humans , Male , Snakes , Spiders
17.
Integr Physiol Behav Sci ; 28(3): 213-25, 1993.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8217859

ABSTRACT

Differences related to age and to specific neurological (Parkinsonian) damage were studied by contrasting, respectively, old (mean age 64 years) and young (27 years) subjects (N = 15), and old-normal (N = 15) and old-Parkinsonian (N = 15) subjects. Both behavioral as well as psychophysiological dependent variables were employed. The behavioral measure was performance on a discrimination learning task, while the psychophysiological measures were based on habituation to a repeated tone stimulus and on a Pavlovian differential conditioning preparation. The behavioral task showed predominantly age-related differences, with the young learning faster. Another age-related difference was interpreted as showing a more insight-like learning process in the young. Response-bias (beta) values did not differ between groups. Age-related differences also emerged more clearly than specific-neurological-damage differences in the psychophysiological data. The older subjects manifested markedly less autonomic conditioning, which was probably due to a lowering of reactivity, as well as the emergence of habituation to the (loud-noise) unconditional stimulus. A correlational analysis of discrimination conditioning also yielded age-related differences. Most notably, reactivity played a greater role in conditioning in the old than in the young subjects. The results illustrated how psychophysiological measures can provide information that complements those provided by behavioral measures.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Attention/physiology , Neurologic Examination , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Association Learning/physiology , Autonomic Nervous System/physiopathology , Basal Ganglia/physiopathology , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Discrimination Learning/physiology , Female , Habituation, Psychophysiologic/physiology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Parkinson Disease/psychology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Psychophysiology
18.
Genet Soc Gen Psychol Monogr ; 119(2): 209-32, 1993 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8405968

ABSTRACT

The problem of emotional tension is usually discussed only with regard to its negative (maladaptive) aspects. The positive (adaptive) function of emotional tension, however, is as important as its negative function. In this article, we have examined psychophysiological outcomes of adaptive versus maladaptive emotional tension with respect to opposite forms of behavior (search activity and renunciation of search) that have an opposite outcome on body resistance and performance. Some traditional psychophysiological problems, for example, the law of initial values (Wilder, 1931), the difference between orienting and defensive reaction, or between anxiety and panic behavior, are revised on the basis of the assumption of adaptive and maladaptive emotional tension.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Affective Symptoms/psychology , Stress, Psychological/complications , Adaptation, Psychological/physiology , Affective Symptoms/physiopathology , Animals , Arousal/physiology , Humans , Psychophysiology , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology
19.
Integr Physiol Behav Sci ; 28(2): 154-7, 1993.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8318440

ABSTRACT

Most investigations of information processing in human Pavlovian autonomic conditioning focussed on the role of awareness of the contingency of the conditioned stimulus (CS) and the unconditioned stimulus (UCS). While in these studies only the qualitative information of the CS (UCS occurring vs not occurring) was varied, the present experiment was designed to vary the quantitative information of the CS. In a differential conditioning paradigm, using a letter reproduction task as nonaversive UCS, electrodermal responses to different degrees of CS information content were investigated. Twenty subjects experienced two different conditions in a within subject design. In one condition only the number of letters used in the following UCS was presented as CS+, while in the other condition the CS already contained the whole UCS information. Both conditions led to significant differences in magnitudes of electrodermal responding.


Subject(s)
Arousal , Conditioning, Classical , Galvanic Skin Response , Mental Processes , Adult , Association Learning , Attention , Female , Humans , Male , Psychomotor Performance
20.
Peptides ; 12(6): 1393-8, 1991.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1815226

ABSTRACT

Effects of arginine-vasopressin (AVP) on the habituation of the orienting reaction and response to stimulus mismatch were investigated in a between-group design with 40 healthy male volunteers using skin conductance and heart rate responses as dependent measures. Twenty-one 1000 Hz tones of 90 dB(A) intensity and 2 s duration were presented with alternating intervals of 20 and 140 s. Stimulus mismatch responses were analyzed to the tones after the long intervals and to a change of the interval duration. The expected prevention of habituation as an indicator of a general stimulus-related increase of phasic arousal under AVP could not be confirmed. There were no differences between the AVP and the placebo group in the skin conductance and heart rate responses. The interval change did not provoke a dishabituation reaction, but responses to the tones after the long intervals were reliably enhanced. However, AVP did not increase the reaction to stimulus mismatch. It is concluded that autonomic indicators of the habituation of the OR remain unaffected by AVP.


Subject(s)
Arginine Vasopressin/pharmacology , Habituation, Psychophysiologic/drug effects , Orientation/drug effects , Acoustic Stimulation , Adolescent , Adult , Arginine Vasopressin/physiology , Galvanic Skin Response/drug effects , Habituation, Psychophysiologic/physiology , Heart Rate/drug effects , Humans , Male , Orientation/physiology
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