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Temporal preparation,response inhibition and impulsivity
Authors:Á  ngel Correa,Mó  nica Triviñ  o,Carolina Pé  rez-Dueñ  as,Alberto Acosta,Juan Lupiá  ñ  ez
Affiliation:1. Departamento de Psicología Experimental y Fisiología del Comportamiento, Universidad de Granada, Spain;2. Servicio de Neuropsicología, Hospital Universitario San Rafael, Granada, Spain
Abstract:Temporal preparation and impulsivity involve overlapping neural structures (prefrontal cortex) and cognitive functions (response inhibition and time perception), however, their interrelations had not been investigated. We studied such interrelations by comparing the performance of groups with low vs. high non-clinical trait impulsivity during a temporal preparation go no-go task. This task measured, in less than 10 min, how response inhibition was influenced both by temporal orienting of attention (guided by predictive temporal cues) and by sequential effects (produced by repetition/alternation of the duration of preparatory intervals in consecutive trials). The results showed that sequential effects produced dissociable patterns of temporal preparation as a function of impulsivity. Sequential effects facilitated both response speed (reaction times – RTs – to the go condition) and response inhibition (false alarms to the no-go condition) selectively in the low impulsivity group. In the high impulsivity group, in contrast, sequential effects only improved RTs but not response inhibition. We concluded that both excitatory and inhibitory processing may be enhanced concurrently by sequential effects, which enables the temporal preparation of fast and controlled responses. Impulsivity could hence be related to less efficient temporal preparation of that inhibitory processing.
Keywords:Attention   Temporal orienting   Sequential effects   Go no-go task   Time perception   Cueing   Trait impulsivity
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