Abstract

It has been argued that attentional processing of visual stimuli is facilitated by a voluntary action that triggers the stimulus onset. However, the relationship between action-induced facilitation of attention and the neural substrates has not been well established. The present study investigated whether the locus coeruleus-noradrenaline (LC-NA) system is involved in this facilitation effect. A rapid serial visual presentation paradigm was used to assess the dynamics of transient attention in humans. Participants were instructed to change a digit stream to a letter stream by pressing a button and specifying successive targets of four letters. Pupil dilation was measured as an index of LC-NA function. Accuracy of target identification was better when the temporal delay between participants’ key press and target onset was 800 ms than when targets appeared just after the key press or when targets appeared without key press. Accuracy of target identification was positively correlated with both the peak amplitude of pupil dilation and the pupil size at the time of the key press. These results indicate that target identification in the visual task is closely linked to pupil dilation. We conclude that the LC-NA system plays an important role in the facilitation of transient attention driven by voluntary action.

Highlights

  • We interact with the environment around us on a daily basis in order to achieve various goals

  • The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether the locus coeruleus-noradrenaline (LC-NA) system is involved in the facilitation of transient attention of visual stimuli triggered by voluntary actions, using the pupillary response as a dependent variable

  • We investigated the relationship between the LC-NA system and the facilitation of transient attention to visual stimuli whose onset was triggered by a voluntary action by measuring changes in pupil diameter, which reflects the levels of NA released from LC

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Summary

Introduction

We interact with the environment around us on a daily basis in order to achieve various goals. Kihara and Kawahara (2011) demonstrated that when participants voluntarily triggered the appearance of the first target, the identification accuracy of both first and second target increased This finding suggests that transient attention driven by the onset of the first target is facilitated by voluntary triggering of the first target, enhancing the firsttarget processing itself. This permits a rapid orienting of temporal attention from the first to the second target, reducing the subsequent attentional blink deficit. The neurobiological mechanisms responsible for this attentional facilitation of visual processing triggered by voluntary actions have remained unclear

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