Heart‐rate and electrodermal orienting responses to visual stimuli differing in complexity
- 1 September 1979
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Scandinavian Journal of Psychology
- Vol. 20 (1) , 37-41
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9450.1979.tb00680.x
Abstract
Orienting response (OR) theory predicts that amount of information in the stimulus, or stimulus complexity, should be an important determinant of OR elicitation and habituation, more intense and more slowly habituating ORs being expected to complex than to simple stimuli. This prediction was tested in an experiment where subjects were exposed to simple and complex visual stimuli in randomized order, while heart‐rate and skin conductance were measured. Complex stimuli evoked a more pronounced deceleratory heartrate response than did simple stimuli. However, the two conditions did not differ in rate of habituation of this response. For skin conductance responses, on the other hand, the complex stimulus took more trials than the simple stimulus to reach habituation, whereas the two conditions did not differ in response magnitude. Thus, the hypothesis of more intense orienting to complex stimuli was supported by the heart‐rate data, and that of slower habituation to complex stimuli, of the skin conductance data.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Orienting and Defensive Responding in the Electrodermal System: Palmar‐Dorsal Differences and Recovery Rate during Conditioning to Potentially Phobic StimuliPsychophysiology, 1978
- Locus of control and habituation of the electrodermal orienting response to nonsignal and signal stimuli.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1977
- Amplitude and Habituation of the Orienting Reflex as a Function of Stimulus IntensityPsychophysiology, 1974
- Accuracy of psychophysical judgments and physiological response amplitude.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1973
- Range Correction Applied to Heart Rate and to GSR DataPsychophysiology, 1972
- Habituation of the orienting reaction as a function of stimulus informationPsychonomic Science, 1971
- Heart-rate change as a component of the orienting response.Psychological Bulletin, 1966
- Effects of stimulus complexity and incongruity on duration of EEG desynchronizationElectroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1965
- Novelty, complexity, incongruity, extrinsic motivation, and the GSR.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1963
- The influence of complexity and novelty in visual figures on orienting responses.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1958