Abstract

Clinical and experimental evidence suggests a special role of the right hemisphere for alerting and orienting. However, it is not clear whether these attentional aspects should be taken to be independent or interacting. At least on the functional neuroanatomical level there seems to be an overlap in right parietal and frontal cortical structures. In this sleep deprivation study we examined the effect of different levels of arousal on covert orienting of attention repeatedly over a period of 28 h in 11 healthy subjects. The main finding is a disproportionate and significant slowing of responses to stimuli presented to the left visual hemifield that could only be observed in a state of maximally reduced arousal at 5:00 a.m. Furthermore, a facilitation of attentional shifts to the right could be observed in invalid trials when attention had to be reoriented. These results suggest an interaction of arousal and orienting, at least in situations of maximally reduced activation when attentional asymmetries could be provoked even in healthy subjects. The findings are compatible with a right hemisphere dominance for alerting and orienting, and they are discussed in the light of theoretical accounts of visual orienting.

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