The effect of betel nut chewing on contour and object masking

被引:0
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作者
Ming-Chou Ho
Chin-Kun Wang
机构
[1] Chung-Shan Medical University,Department of Psychology
[2] Clinical Psychological Room,undefined
[3] Chung-Shan Medical University Hospital,undefined
[4] School of Nutrition,undefined
[5] Chung-Shan Medical University,undefined
来源
关键词
Betel nut; Areca; Masking; Contour; Object; Stimulant effects;
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学科分类号
摘要
The betel nut is a common stimulant in many Asian countries. We employed the masking task developed by Enns and Di Lollo (Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 4, 345–352, 1997) to investigate the effects of betel nuts on sensory and attentional processing. In the masking task, participants needed to identify a target that was masked by either a contour mask or an object mask. Sensory processing was assessed by examining target identification in the contour mask condition when the target was presented only centrally, whereas attentional processing was assessed by examining target identification in the object mask condition when the target was presented randomly in either a central or a parafoveal location. The results showed that chewing betel nut and chewing gum produced significant contour masking with a large effect size, similar to the pure control condition, in which participants chewed nothing, and the placebo control condition, in which what participants chewed was disguised. This suggests that neither betel nut nor gum affects sensory processing. Alternatively, betel nut chewing could produce a reduction in object masking for the habitual chewers and the nonchewers, suggesting an effect of betel nut on attentional processing. This concentrated attention was also observed in the placebo control condition; thus, it cannot be exclusively driven by the expectation effect. Also, chewing per se reduced the attentional distribution foveally.
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页码:2583 / 2593
页数:10
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