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J Neurophysiol 97: 2758-2768, 2007. First published February 7, 2007; doi:10.1152/jn.00017.2007
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Visual and Auditory Alertness: Modality-Specific and Supramodal Neural Mechanisms and Their Modulation by Nicotine

Christiane M. Thiel1,2,3 and Gereon R. Fink2,3,4

1Institute of Biology and Environmental Sciences, University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg; 2Department of Medicine, Institute of Neuroscience and Biophysics and 3Brain Imaging Centre West, Research Centre Juelich, Juelich; and 4Department of Neurology, University Hospital, Cologne University, Cologne, Germany

Submitted 5 January 2006; accepted in final form 23 January 2007

Alertness is a nonselective attention component that refers to a state of general readiness that improves stimulus processing and response initiation. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to identify neural correlates of visual and auditory alertness. A further aim was to investigate the modulatory effects of the cholinergic agonist nicotine. Nonsmoking participants were given either placebo or nicotine (NICORETTE gum, 2 mg) and performed a target-detection task with warned and unwarned trials in the visual and auditory modality. Our results provide evidence for modality-specific correlates of visual and auditory alertness in respective higher-level sensory cortices and in posterior parietal and frontal brain areas. The only region commonly involved in visual and auditory alertness was the right superior temporal gyrus. A connectivity analysis showed that this supramodal region exhibited modality-dependent coupling with respective higher sensory cortices. Nicotine was found to mainly decrease visual and auditory alertness-related activity in several brain regions, which was evident as a significant interaction of nicotine-induced decreases in BOLD signal in warned trials and increases in unwarned trials. The cholinergic drug also affected alerting-dependent activity in the supramodal right superior temporal gyrus; here the effect was the result of a significant increase of neural activity in unwarned trials. We conclude that the role of the right superior temporal gyrus is to induce an "alert" state in response to warning cues and thereby optimize stimulus processing and responding. We speculate that nicotine increases brain mechanisms of alertness specifically in conditions where no extrinsic warning is provided.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: C. M. Thiel, Institute of Biology and Environmental Science, Fak. V, Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany (E-mail: christiane.thiel{at}uni-oldenburg.de)




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