Journal article

Acute caffeine ingestion affects surround suppression of perceived contrast

BN Nguyen, SA Hew, J Ly, HY Shin, JC Wong, E Yeung, AM McKendrick

Journal of Psychopharmacology | SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD | Published : 2018

Abstract

Caffeine is a widely used psychostimulant that is associated with increased acetylcholine levels in mammalian brain and acetycholinesterase antagonism. Acetylcholine, a neuromodulator, plays an important role in the processing of visual information. One key example in human vision, thought to at least partly involve cholinergic neuromodulation, is perceptual surround suppression of contrast, whereby the perceived contrast of a pattern is altered by the presence of a neighbouring pattern. Perceptual surround suppression is weaker with pharmacological administration of donepezil (a centrally-acting acetylcholine enzyme inhibitor) in healthy human observers. Here, we test whether temporarily ma..

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University of Melbourne Researchers