TY - JOUR
T1 - Caffeine effects on ERP components and performance in an equiprobable auditory Go/NoGo task
AU - Barry, Robert J.
AU - De Blasio, Frances M.
AU - Cave, Adele E.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Background: Research has reliably demonstrated that caffeine produces a general increase in physiological arousal in humans, but we previously failed to obtain the expected arousal-based changes in manually quantified event-related potential (ERP) components in response to the stimuli in a simple Go/NoGo task. Methods: A single oral dose of caffeine (250"‰mg) was used in a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled repeated-measures cross-over study. Adult participants (N=24) abstained from caffeine for 4 hours before each of two sessions, approximately 1 week apart. An equiprobable auditory Go/NoGo task was used, with a random mix of 75 tones at 1,000"‰Hz and 75 at 1,500"‰Hz. All tones were 50"‰ms duration (rise/fall time 5"‰ms) at 60 dB SPL, with a fixed stimulus-onset asynchrony of 1100"‰ms. Principal component analysis (a form of factor analysis) was used to quantify orthogonal ERP components. Results: ERP components reflected the different sequential processing of each stimulus type in this paradigm, replicating previous results. Caffeine was associated with a reduction in reaction time and fewer omission errors. The major ERP effects of caffeine were apparent as a slightly enhanced Processing Negativity and larger P3b amplitudes to Go stimuli. There were few effects on components to NoGo stimuli. Conclusions: The results confirm our previous findings that caffeine improves aspects of the differential processing related to response production and task performance, but may be interpreted as supporting the simple amplification of ERP component amplitudes predicted by the general arousal induced by caffeine.
AB - Background: Research has reliably demonstrated that caffeine produces a general increase in physiological arousal in humans, but we previously failed to obtain the expected arousal-based changes in manually quantified event-related potential (ERP) components in response to the stimuli in a simple Go/NoGo task. Methods: A single oral dose of caffeine (250"‰mg) was used in a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled repeated-measures cross-over study. Adult participants (N=24) abstained from caffeine for 4 hours before each of two sessions, approximately 1 week apart. An equiprobable auditory Go/NoGo task was used, with a random mix of 75 tones at 1,000"‰Hz and 75 at 1,500"‰Hz. All tones were 50"‰ms duration (rise/fall time 5"‰ms) at 60 dB SPL, with a fixed stimulus-onset asynchrony of 1100"‰ms. Principal component analysis (a form of factor analysis) was used to quantify orthogonal ERP components. Results: ERP components reflected the different sequential processing of each stimulus type in this paradigm, replicating previous results. Caffeine was associated with a reduction in reaction time and fewer omission errors. The major ERP effects of caffeine were apparent as a slightly enhanced Processing Negativity and larger P3b amplitudes to Go stimuli. There were few effects on components to NoGo stimuli. Conclusions: The results confirm our previous findings that caffeine improves aspects of the differential processing related to response production and task performance, but may be interpreted as supporting the simple amplification of ERP component amplitudes predicted by the general arousal induced by caffeine.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:68118
U2 - 10.1089/jcr.2014.0011
DO - 10.1089/jcr.2014.0011
M3 - Article
SN - 2156-5368
VL - 4
SP - 83
EP - 92
JO - Journal of Caffeine Research
JF - Journal of Caffeine Research
IS - 3
ER -