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Journal Article

Citation

Halliday R, Naylor H, Brandeis D, Callaway E, Yano L, Herzig K. Psychophysiology 1994; 31(4): 331-337.

Affiliation

Psychiatry Research, Department of Veterans Affairs, and University of California-San Francisco, 94121, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, Society for Psychophysiological Research, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10690913

Abstract

Twelve subjects were tested with D-amphetamine, yohimbine, clonidine, and a placebo on a task with two levels of stimulus and two levels of response complexity. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that noradrenergic drugs affect early stimulus processes. D-amphetamine speeded reaction time (RT), clonidine slowed it, and yohimbine had no effect. D-amphetamine and yohimbine decreased N1 latency and clonidine increased it. D-amphetamine and yohimbine decreased P3 latency and clonidine increased it but, in each case, only when latency estimates were based on single trials, not on averages. D-amphetamine's effect on RT, not P3, as measured by the average, is consistent with previous results. Single trial measures appear more sensitive. Speeding of N1 and single-trial P3 data indicate that noradrenergic drugs affect processing of early (visual) information. D-amphetamine's speeding of single-trial P3 estimates was attributed to its noradrenergic actions. Yohimbine's speeding of P3 without changing RT is consistent with neural net (parallel) simulations but not with a serial model. These findings support the assumption that different neurotransmitters modulate specific cognitive processes.


Language: en

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