Nicotine; Human cognition; Motricity; Reaction time; Cigarette
Abstract :
[en] Rationale: It has been evidenced that nicotine acts on some dimensions of human attention. Objective: This study was carried out to test whether the positive effects of nicotine usually observed on the posterior system are specific or should rather be explained in terms of an effect of nicotine on eye movement velocity. Methods: Ten participants were submitted to four tasks assessing attention. The tasks were borrowed from Zimmermann and Fimm’s Battery for the Assessment of Attention: alert, eye movements, visual search and in- compatibility. The order of the different tasks was balanced among participants. A within-subjects repeated- measure design was used. Participants received a 0.9-mg or 0.1-mg nicotine cigarette. The 0.1-mg cigarette was used as control. The order of administration of doses over sessions was counterbalanced. During the testing day, volunteers smoked their own cigarette and then waited 3 h without smoking. At the end of this abstinence period, participants completed the baseline tests before smoking an experimental cigarette ad libitum. They were then tested again. Results: Participants who received nicotine appeared to respond faster in an eye movement task – a task associated with a non-elaborated attentional process. Similarly, their alert state improved. On the contrary, no effect of nicotine was observed in the incompatibility task and in the visual search task de- pending on elaborated attentional process. Conclusions: Data support previous observations and suggest that, first, non-elaborated information processing appeared to be more sensitive to nicotine and, second, this effect is not due to a velocity factor.
scite shows how a scientific paper has been cited by providing the context of the citation, a classification describing whether it supports, mentions, or contrasts the cited claim, and a label indicating in which section the citation was made.
Bibliography
Corbeta M., Miezin F.M., Shulman G.L., Petersen S.E. (1993) A PET study of visuaspatial attention. J Neurosci 13:1202-1226.
Corbeta M., Shulman G.L., Miezin F.M., Petersen S.E. (1996) Superior parietal cortex activation during spatial attention shifts and visual feature conjunction. Science 270:802-805.
Eriksen C.W., Hoffman J.E. (1973) The extent of processing of noise elements during selective visual encoding from visual displays. Percept Psychophysics 14:155-160.
Foulds J., Stapleton J., Swettenham J., Bell N., MeSoricy K., Russell M.A. (1996) Cognitive performance effects of subcutaneous nicotine in smokers and never-smokers. Psychopharmacology 127:31-38.
Ghatan P.H., Ingvar M., Eriksson L., Stone-Elander S., Serrander M., Ekberg K., Wahren J. (1998) Cerebral effects of nicotine during cognition in smokers and non-smokers. Psychopharmacology 136:179-189.
Heishman S.J., Taylor R.C., Henningfield J.E. (1994) Nicotine and smoking: A review of effects on human performance. Exp Clin Psychopharmacol 2:345-395.
Hoffman J.E. (1975) Hierarchical stages in the processing of visual search. Percept Psychophysics 18:348-354.
Hoffman J.E., Nelson B. (1981) Spacial selectivity in visual search. Percept Psychophysics 30:283-290.
Hoffman J.E., Subramaniam B. (1995) The role of visual attention in saccadic eye movements. Percept Psychophysics 57:787-795.
Homan H. Alertness involves a change in the internal state1987.
Humphrey G.W., Freeman T.A., Muller H.J. (1992) Lesioning a connectionist model of visual search: Selective effects on distractor grouping. Can J Psychol 46:417-427.
Kosslyn S.M., Andersen R.A. Frontiers in cognitive neuroscience, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA; 1992.
Ksir C., Hakan R.L., Kellar K.J. (1987) Chronic nicotine and locolotor activity: Influences of exposure dose and test dose. Psychopharmacology 92:25-29.
Le Houezec J., Halliday R., Benowitz N.L., Callaway E., Naylor H., Herzig K. (1994) A low dose of subcutaneous nicotine improves information processing in non-smokers. Psychopharmacology 114:628-634.
Mancuso G., Warburton D.M., Mélen M., Sherwood N., Tirelli E. (1999) Selective effects of nicotine on attention processes. Psychopharmacology 146:199-204.
Maruff P., Malone V., Currie J. (1995) Asymetries in the covert orienting of visual spatial attention to spatial and non-spatial cues in Alzheimer's disease. Brain 118:1421-1435.
Morgan S.F., Pickens R.W. (1982) Reaction time performance as a function of cigarette smoking procedure. Psychopharmacology 77:383-386.
Muir J.L., Everitt B.J., Robbins T.W. (1994) AMPA-induced excitotoxic lesions of basal forebrain: A significant role for the cortical cholinergic system in attentional function. J Neurosci 14:2313-2326.
Murphy F.C., Klein R.M. (1998) The effects of nicotine on spatial and non-spatial expectancies in a covert orienting task. Neuropsychologia 36:1103-1114.
Nobre A.C., Sebestyen G.N., Gitelman D.R., Mesulam M.M., Frackowiak R.S., Fritz C.D. (1997) Functional localization of neural network for visual spatial attention by positron emission tomography. Brain 120:515-533.
Oken B.S., Kishiyama M.A., Kaye J.A., Howieson D.B. (1994) Attention deficit in Alzheimer's disease is not simulated by an anti-cholinergic/antihistaminergic drug and is distinct from deficits in healthy aging. Neurology 44:657-662.
Parasuraman R., Greenwood P.M., Haxby J.V., Grady C.L. (1992) Visuospatial attention in dementia of the Alzheimer type. Brain 115:711-733.
Posner M.I. (1988) Stuctures and functions of selective attention., Boll T, Bryant B (eds) Master lectures in clinical neuropsychology and brain function: research, measurement, and practice. American Psychological Association, Washington, DC; 171-202.
Posner M.I., Petersen S.E. (1990) The attention system of the human brain. Ann Rev Neurosci 13:25-42.
Posner M.I., Nissen N.J., Ogden W.C. (1978) Attended and unattended processing modes: The role of set for spatial location., Picks HL, Saltzman IJ (eds) Modes of perceiving and processing information. Erlbaum, Hillsdale, NJ; 137-157.
Rusted J.M., Graupner L., Greenwood K. (1996) Methodological considerations in nicotine research: The use of denicotinised cigarettes as the control condition in smoking studies. Psychopharmacology 125:176-178.
Salthouse T.A. (1996) The processing-speed theory of adult age differences in cognition. Psychol Rev 103:403-428.
Sheliga B.M., Riggio I., Rizzolatti G. (1994) Orienting of attention and eye movements. Exp Brain Res 98:507-522.
Shepherd M., Findlay J.M., Hockey R.J. (1986) The relationship between eye movement and spatial attention. Q J Exp Psychol 38:475-491.
Sherwood N. (1993) Effects of nicotine on human psychomotor performance. Hum Psychopharmacol 8:155-184.
Van Zomeren A.H., Brouwer W.H. Clinical neuropsychology of attention, Oxford University Press, Oxford; 1994.
Voytko M.L., Olton D.S., Richardson R.T., Gorman L.K., Tobin J.T., Price D.L. (1994) Basal forebrain lesion in monkeys disrupt attention but not learning and memory. J Neurosci 14:167-186.
Warburton D.M., Arnall C. (1994) Improvements in performance without nicotine withdrawal. Psychopharmacology 115:539-542.
Wesnes K., Warburton D.M. (1984) The effects of cigarettes of varying yield on rapid information processing performance. Psychopharmacology 82:338-342.
Witte E.A., Morrocco R.T. (1997) Effects of altering brain cholinergic activity on covert orienting of attention: Comparison of monkeys and human performance. Psychopharmacology 132:1324-1334.
Zimmermann P., Fimm B. Test d'évaluation de l'Attention (TEA), Version 1.02, P. Zimmermann, Psychologisches Institut der Universität Freiburg, Freiburg; 1994.
Similar publications
Sorry the service is unavailable at the moment. Please try again later.
This website uses cookies to improve user experience. Read more
Save & Close
Accept all
Decline all
Show detailsHide details
Cookie declaration
About cookies
Strictly necessary
Performance
Strictly necessary cookies allow core website functionality such as user login and account management. The website cannot be used properly without strictly necessary cookies.
This cookie is used by Cookie-Script.com service to remember visitor cookie consent preferences. It is necessary for Cookie-Script.com cookie banner to work properly.
Performance cookies are used to see how visitors use the website, eg. analytics cookies. Those cookies cannot be used to directly identify a certain visitor.
Used to store the attribution information, the referrer initially used to visit the website
Cookies are small text files that are placed on your computer by websites that you visit. Websites use cookies to help users navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. Cookies that are required for the website to operate properly are allowed to be set without your permission. All other cookies need to be approved before they can be set in the browser.
You can change your consent to cookie usage at any time on our Privacy Policy page.