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      Prompt but inefficient: nicotine differentially modulates discrete components of attention

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          Abstract

          Rationale

          Nicotine has been shown to improve both memory and attention when assessed through speeded motor responses. Since very few studies have assessed effects of nicotine on visual attention using measures that are uncontaminated by motoric effects, nicotine’s attentional effects may, at least partially, be due to speeding of motor function.

          Objectives

          Using an unspeeded, accuracy-based test, the CombiTVA paradigm, we examined whether nicotine enhances attention when it is measured independently of motor processing.

          Methods

          We modelled data with a computational theory of visual attention (TVA; Bundesen 1990) so as to derive independent estimates of several distinct components of attention from performance of the single task: threshold of visual perception, perceptual processing speed, visual short-term memory storage capacity and top–down controlled selectivity. Acute effects of nicotine (2 mg gum) on performance were assessed in 24 healthy young non-smokers in a placebo-controlled counterbalanced, crossover design. Chronic effects of nicotine were investigated in 24 age- and education-matched minimally deprived smokers.

          Results

          Both an acute dose of nicotine in non-smokers and chronic nicotine use in temporarily abstaining smokers improved perceptual thresholds but slowed subsequent perceptual speed. Moreover, both acute and chronic nicotine use reduced attentional selectivity though visual short-term memory capacity was unimpaired.

          Conclusions

          Nicotine differentially affected discrete components of visual attention, with acute and chronic doses revealing identical patterns of performance. We challenge prior reports of nicotine-induced speeding of information processing by showing, for the first time, that nicotine slows down perceptual processing speed when assessed using accuracy-based measures of cognitive performance.

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          Most cited references61

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          Attention and the detection of signals.

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            A theory of visual attention.

            A unified theory of visual recognition and attentional selection is developed by integrating the biased-choice model for single-stimulus recognition (Luce, 1963; Shepard, 1957) with a choice model for selection from multielement displays (Bundesen, Pedersen, & Larsen, 1984) in a race model framework. Mathematically, the theory is tractable, and it specifies the computations necessary for selection. The theory is applied to extant findings from a broad range of experimental paradigms. The findings include effects of object integrality in selective report, number and spatial position of targets in divided-attention paradigms, selection criterion and number of distracters in focused-attention paradigms, delay of selection cue in partial report, and consistent practice in search. On the whole, the quantitative fits are encouraging.
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              The use of analogue scales in rating subjective feelings

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Signe.Vangkilde@psy.ku.dk
                Journal
                Psychopharmacology (Berl)
                Psychopharmacology
                Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0033-3158
                1432-2072
                1 June 2011
                1 June 2011
                December 2011
                : 218
                : 4
                : 667-680
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Center for Visual Cognition, Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen, Oester Farimagsgade 2A, 1353 Copenhagen K, Denmark
                [2 ]Laboratoire de Neurobiologie de la Cognition, Université de Provence & CNRS, Marseille, France
                Article
                2361
                10.1007/s00213-011-2361-x
                3222829
                21629997
                236f1d24-6619-49e5-ad0c-2db6d6e94aef
                © The Author(s) 2011
                History
                : 24 March 2011
                : 16 May 2011
                Categories
                Original Investigation
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag 2011

                Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine
                human,memory,non-smoker,attention,nicotine,perceptual processing speed,selectivity,smoker,cognition

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