TY  - JOUR
AU  - Langner, R.
AU  - Eickhoff, S.B.
AU  - Steinborn, M.
TI  - Mental Fatigue Modulates Dynamic Adaptation to Perceptual Demand in Speeded Detection
JO  - PLoS one
VL  - 6
SN  - 1932-6203
CY  - Lawrence, Kan.
PB  - PLoS
M1  - PreJuSER-19836
SP  - e28399
PY  - 2011
N1  - SBE was supported by the Human Brain Project (R01-MH074457-01A1), the Initiative and Networking Fund of the Helmholtz Association within the Helmholtz Alliance on Systems Biology (Human Brain Model), and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (IRTG 1328). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
AB  - When stimulus intensity in simple reaction-time tasks randomly varies across trials, detection speed usually improves after a low-intensity trial. With auditory stimuli, this improvement was often found to be asymmetric, being greater on current low-intensity trials. Our study investigated (1) whether asymmetric sequential intensity adaptation also occurs with visual stimuli; (2) whether these adjustments reflect decision-criterion shifts or, rather, a modulation of perceptual sensitivity; and (3) how sequential intensity adaptation and its underlying mechanisms are affected by mental fatigue induced through prolonged performance. In a continuous speeded detection task with randomly alternating high- and low-intensity visual stimuli, the reaction-time benefit after low-intensity trials was greater on subsequent low- than high-intensity trials. This asymmetry, however, only developed with time on task (TOT). Signal-detection analyses showed that the decision criterion transiently became more liberal after a low-intensity trial, whereas observer sensitivity increased when the preceding and current stimulus were of equal intensity. TOT-induced mental fatigue only affected sensitivity, which dropped more on low- than on high-intensity trials. This differential fatigue-related sensitivity decrease selectively enhanced the impact of criterion down-shifts on low-intensity trials, revealing how the interplay of two perceptual mechanisms and their modulation by fatigue combine to produce the observed overall pattern of asymmetric performance adjustments to varying visual intensity in continuous speeded detection. Our results have implications for similar patterns of sequential demand adaptation in other cognitive domains as well as for real-world prolonged detection performance.
KW  - Adaptation, Physiological
KW  - Adult
KW  - Attention: physiology
KW  - Female
KW  - Humans
KW  - Male
KW  - Mental Fatigue: physiopathology
KW  - Reaction Time: physiology
KW  - Signal Detection, Psychological
KW  - Visual Perception: physiology
KW  - Young Adult
KW  - J (WoSType)
LB  - PUB:(DE-HGF)16
C6  - pmid:22145041
C2  - pmc:PMC3228758
UR  - <Go to ISI:>//WOS:000298168900024
DO  - DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0028399
UR  - https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/19836
ER  -