Publication | Closed Access
Selective Attention Effects on the Reflex Blink
69
Citations
17
References
1981
Year
BiofeedbackReflex‐eliciting StimulusAffective NeuroscienceSelective AttentionMotor ControlAttentionReflex MagnitudeSocial SciencesElectrophysiological EvaluationSensory NeurosciencePsychophysiologyCognitive ElectrophysiologyMotor NeurophysiologyMotor NeuroscienceSensationHealth SciencesSensorimotor ControlCognitive ScienceMotor PathwaysBehavioral NeuroscienceSensorimotor IntegrationVision ResearchNervous SystemPerception-action LoopSelective Attention EffectsVisual FunctionNeurophysiologySensorimotor TransformationEye TrackingNeuroscienceBrain Electrophysiology
ABSTRACT Past work has shown that facilitation of reflex blinking accompanies cardiac deceleration when the attention of subjects is directed to a reflex‐eliciting stimulus. The present studies showed that when warning stimuli directed attention instead to weak (tactile) stimuli presented simultaneously with reflex‐eliciting (acoustic) stimuli, cardiac deceleration was still present but reflex magnitude was unchanged or inhibited. However, latency to reflex onset remained facilitated, i.e., latency and magnitude changes were discordant. The findings were interpreted as evidence for two independent processes: a process capable of selectively enhancing or attenuating sensory input and a non‐selective process presumably facilitating motor pathways.
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