Effects of acute nicotine on auditory change-related cortical responses

Rationale and objective Nicotine is known to have enhancing effects on some aspects of attention and cognition. The purpose of the present study was to elucidate the effects of nicotine on pre-attentive change-related cortical activity. Methods Change-related cortical activity in response to an abru...

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Published inPsychopharmacologia Vol. 224; no. 2; pp. 327 - 335
Main Authors Otsuru, Naofumi, Tsuruhara, Aki, Motomura, Eishi, Tanii, Hisashi, Nishihara, Makoto, Inui, Koji, Kakigi, Ryusuke
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Berlin/Heidelberg Springer-Verlag 01.11.2012
Springer
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Rationale and objective Nicotine is known to have enhancing effects on some aspects of attention and cognition. The purpose of the present study was to elucidate the effects of nicotine on pre-attentive change-related cortical activity. Methods Change-related cortical activity in response to an abrupt increase (3 dB) and decrease (6 dB) in sound pressure in a continuous sound was recorded by using magnetoencephalography. Nicotine was administered with a nicotine gum (4 mg of nicotine). Eleven healthy nonsmokers were tested with a double-blind and placebo-controlled design. Effects of nicotine on the main component of the onset response peaking at around 50 ms (P50m) and the main component of the change-related response at around 120 ms (Change-N1m) were investigated. Results Nicotine failed to affect P50m, while it significantly increased the amplitude of Change-N1m evoked by both auditory changes. The magnitude of the amplitude increase was similar among subjects regardless of the magnitude of the baseline response, which resulted in the percent increase of Change-N1m being greater for subjects with Change-N1m of smaller amplitude. Conclusions Since Change-N1m represents a pre-attentive automatic process to encode new auditory events, the present results suggest that nicotine can exert beneficial cognitive effects without a direct impact on attention.
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ISSN:0033-3158
1432-2072
DOI:10.1007/s00213-012-2757-2