| Literature DB >> 27291291 |
Daniel P Newman1, Steven W Lockley1,2, Gerard M Loughnane3,4, Ana Carina P Martins1,5, Rafael Abe1,6, Marco T R Zoratti1,6, Simon P Kelly7, Megan H O'Neill1, Shantha M W Rajaratnam1,2, Redmond G O'Connell4,8, Mark A Bellgrove1.
Abstract
Brain networks subserving alertness in humans interact with those for spatial attention orienting. We employed blue-enriched light to directly manipulate alertness in healthy volunteers. We show for the first time that prior exposure to higher, relative to lower, intensities of blue-enriched light speeds response times to left, but not right, hemifield visual stimuli, via an asymmetric effect on right-hemisphere parieto-occipital α-power. Our data give rise to the tantalising possibility of light-based interventions for right hemisphere disorders of spatial attention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27291291 PMCID: PMC4904199 DOI: 10.1038/srep27754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The intensity of blue-enriched light influenced response-times to targets in the left, but not right, visual hemifield (A). The difference in grand average post-target α-desynchronisation for left versus right-hemifield targets shows that lateral parieto-occipital electrodes were most sensitive to covert shifts in attention towards each hemifield (B). Increased intensity of blue-enriched light increases α-power over the right hemisphere more than left hemisphere electrodes (C,D). Note that the electrodes exhibiting strongest modulation by light in (C) are the same electrodes that were most sensitive to shifts in spatial attention (B). Error bars represent 95% CIs.
Figure 2Although greater parieto-occipital α (8–13 Hz) power preceding target onset was associated with slower response times, exposure to higher intensity blue-enriched light weakened this relationship.
Inserted histograms show that the distribution of observations as a function of pre-target α-power does not change across light conditions. Error bars represent 95% CIs.
Figure 3Sobel tests revealed that pre-target α-power pooled from right hemisphere parieto-occipital channels mediates the causal influence between increasing light intensity and faster RTs for left-hemifield targets.
The mediation model shows that path c’ is opposite in sign to paths a and b suggesting an ‘inconsistent mediation’ effect in line with higher Light intensity both increasing α-power (Fig. 1D) while also suppressing its slowing effect on forthcoming RTs.
Figure 4Schematic of a single trial.
Participants fixated on the central dot and monitored the peripheral patches of randomly moving dots for instances of coherent motion (either upward or downward). Participants responded to motion targets via a speeded button press. Coherent motion targets only occurred in one of the four patches, once per trial. The pre-target random motion lasted either 1.8, 2.8 or 3.8 s, chosen randomly on a trial-by-trial basis.