Abstract

Background: Stress adversely affects the attentional focus, the active concentration on stimuli, and increases susceptibility to distraction. To experimentally explore the susceptibility to distraction, the Attention Modulation by Salience Task (AMST) is a validated paradigm measuring reaction times (RT) for processing auditory information while presenting task-irrelevant visual distractors of high or low salience. We extended the AMST by an emotional dimension of distractors and an EEG-based evaluation. We then investigated the effect of the stress-relieving medication Neurexan (Nx4) on the participants' susceptibility to distraction.Methods: Data from a randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover trial (NEURIM study; ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02602275) were exploratively reanalyzed post-hoc. In this trial, 39 participants received a single dose of placebo or Nx4 immediately before the AMST. Participants had to discriminate two different tone modulations (ascending or descending) while simultaneously perceiving task-irrelevant pictures of different salience (high or low) or valence (negative or positive) as distractors. Using EEG recordings, RT and the event-related potential (ERP) components N1, N2, and N3 were analyzed as markers for susceptibility to distraction.Results: In the placebo condition, we could replicate the previously reported task effects of salient distractors with longer RT for high salient distractors on the behavioral level. On the electrophysiological level, we observed significantly increased amplitudes of the N2 and N3 ERP components for positive emotional pictures. In terms of drug effect, we found evidence that Nx4 reduced distractibility by emotional distractors. The effect was shown by significantly reduced amplitudes of N2 and N3 ERP components and reduced RT for the positive valence domain under Nx4 compared to placebo. The Nx4 effects on RT and ERP components also showed a significant correlation.Conclusion: Emotional distractors in addition to the previously used salience distractors and the EEG based evaluation of ERPs valuably complement the AMST. Salient distractors were affecting attentional processes earlier, while valent distractors show modulatory effects later. Our results suggest that Nx4 has beneficial effects on attention by inhibiting the effect of task-irrelevant information and reducing susceptibility to emotionally distracting stimuli. The observation of a beneficial impact of Nx4 on attention regulation is supportive of Nx4's claim as a stress-relieving medication.

Highlights

  • Attention can be described as a mental state in which cognitive resources are focused on certain aspects of the environment rather than on others

  • Goal-directed attention is a slower and observer-driven topdown mechanism centered on the dorsal posterior parietal and Abbreviations: AMST, Attention Modulation by Salience Task; EEG, Electroencephalography; ERP, Event Related Potentials; high salient (HS), High Salient Picture; IAPS, International Affective Picture System; low salient (LS), Low Salient Picture; negative emotional (NE), Negative Valent Picture; Nx4, Neurexan (IMP); positive emotional (PE), Positive Valent Picture; PSS, Perceived Stress Scale; reaction times (RT), Reaction Time; TICS, Trier Inventory for Chronic Stress

  • Negative Emotional Distractors Increase RT at Earlier and Positive at Later Time Point For the valence domain, we found that participants were more susceptible to distraction by negative emotional pictures at the first tone (1,300 ms after picture presentation) whereas participants were more susceptible to distraction by positive emotional pictures at the second tone (∼3,300 ms after picture presentation)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Attention can be described as a mental state in which cognitive resources are focused on certain aspects of the environment rather than on others. Our attention is controlled by two different mechanisms of cognitive processing: a top-down goal-directed mechanism and a bottom-up stimulus-driven compulsion [4]. The latter corresponds to a fast and involuntary automatic bottom-up process centered on the right temporoparietal and ventral frontal cortex which is recruited during the detection of behaviorally relevant sensory events. Goal-directed attention is a slower and observer-driven topdown mechanism centered on the dorsal posterior parietal and Abbreviations: AMST, Attention Modulation by Salience Task; EEG, Electroencephalography; ERP, Event Related Potentials; HS, High Salient Picture; IAPS, International Affective Picture System; LS, Low Salient Picture; NE, Negative Valent Picture; Nx4, Neurexan (IMP); PE, Positive Valent Picture; PSS, Perceived Stress Scale; RT, Reaction Time; TICS, Trier Inventory for Chronic Stress. We investigated the effect of the stress-relieving medication Neurexan (Nx4) on the participants’ susceptibility to distraction

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call