Nicotine Enhances Visuospatial Attention by Deactivating Areas of the Resting Brain Default Network
Open Access
- 28 March 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 27 (13), 3477-3489
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.5129-06.2007
Abstract
Nicotine-induced attentional enhancement is of potential therapeutic value. To investigate the precise attentional function(s) affected and their neuronal mechanisms, the current functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study used an attention task in which subjects responded to stimuli of high (INThigh) or low intensity presented randomly in one of four peripheral locations. Central cues of varying precision predicted the target location. In some trials, the cue was not followed by a target, allowing separate analysis of blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) responses to cue. Minimally deprived smokers underwent fast event-related fMRI twice: once with a nicotine patch (21 mg) and once with a placebo patch. Matched nonsmokers were scanned twice without a patch. Behaviorally, nicotine reduced omission errors and reaction time (RT) of valid and invalid cue trials and intra-individual variability of RT and did so preferentially in trials with INThigh. The BOLD signal related to cue-only trials, regardless of cue precision, demonstrated nicotine-induced deactivation in anterior and posterior cingulate, angular gyrus, middle frontal gyrus, and cuneus. These regions overlapped with the so-called “default network,” which activates during rest and deactivates with attention-demanding activities. Partial correlations controlling for nicotine plasma levels indicated associations of deactivation by nicotine in posterior cingulate and angular gyrus with performance improvements under INThigh. Performance and regional activity in the absence of nicotine never differed between smokers and nonsmokers, ruling out a simple reversal of a deprivation-induced state. These findings suggest that nicotine improved attentional performance by downregulating resting brain function in response to task-related cues. Together with the selectivity of effects for INThigh, this suggests a nicotine-induced potentiation of the alerting properties of external stimuli.Keywords
This publication has 62 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cingulate Activation Increases Dynamically with Response Speed under Stimulus UnpredictabilityCerebral Cortex, 2006
- Neuroanatomical dissociation between bottom–up and top–down processes of visuospatial selective attentionNeuroImage, 2006
- Molecular, Structural, and Functional Characterization of Alzheimer's Disease: Evidence for a Relationship between Default Activity, Amyloid, and MemoryJournal of Neuroscience, 2005
- Head motion suppression using real-time feedback of motion information and its effects on task performance in fMRINeuroImage, 2005
- Nicotine Modulates Reorienting of Visuospatial Attention and Neural Activity in Human Parietal CortexNeuropsychopharmacology, 2005
- Rate of nicotine onset from nicotine replacement therapy and acute responses in smokersNicotine & Tobacco Research, 2004
- Control of goal-directed and stimulus-driven attention in the brainNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2002
- Searching for a baseline: Functional imaging and the resting human brainNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2001
- AFNI: Software for Analysis and Visualization of Functional Magnetic Resonance NeuroimagesComputers and Biomedical Research, 1996
- The Effect of Acetazolamide on Regional Cerebral Blood Oxygenation at Rest and under Stimulation as Assessed by MRIJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1994