The Acoustic Startle Response and Disruption of Aiming: II. Modulation by Forewarning and Preliminary Stimuli

Four experiments examined the disruption of rifle aim by intense noise bursts. In Experiment 1 a trigger pull was followed occasionally by a noise burst. Aiming was disrupted for 1—2 s, an effect that habituated within days and recovered between days. Expected stimuli were less disruptive than were unexpected stimuli. Experiment 2 demonstrated that weak auditory prestimuli 100 ms before unexpected intense sounds also reduced noise-produced errors. Experiment 3 showed that the intratympanic reflex had not played a protective role in this effect. Experiment 4 showed that a weak tactile prestimulus increased both a muscular measure of the acoustic startle reaction and the perturbing effect of the noise burst on motor performance. In general, conditions that affect the amplitude of the acoustic startle reflex similarly influence the disruptive effect of a noise burst on motor performance, but the two measures are not correlated in the detail necessary to suggest a causative relationship.

[1]  H. Hoffman,et al.  Reflex modification in the domain of startle: II. The anomalous history of a robust and ubiquitous phenomenon. , 1983, Psychological bulletin.

[2]  W. Dixon,et al.  BMDP statistical software , 1983 .

[3]  D. Dirks,et al.  Influence of middle-ear muscle contraction on pure-tone suprathreshold loudness judgments. , 1975, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[4]  H. Hoffman,et al.  Motor and cognitive factors in the modification of a reflex , 1983, Perception & psychophysics.

[5]  H. Hoffman,et al.  Startle Reaction: Modification by Background Acoustic Stimulation , 1963, Science.

[6]  J L FLETCHER,et al.  The protective effect of the acoustic reflex for impulsive noises. , 1960, Report. Army Medical Research Laboratory.

[7]  H. Hoffman,et al.  Reflex modification in the domain of startle: I. Some empirical findings and their implications for how the nervous system processes sensory input. , 1980, Psychological review.

[8]  D. Hilding IV The Intratympanic Muscle Reflex as a Protective Mechanism against Loud Impulsive Noise , 1960, The Annals of otology, rhinology, and laryngology.

[9]  M. Vlasak Effect of startle stimuli on performance. , 1969, Aerospace medicine.

[10]  R I Thackray,et al.  Recovery of Motor Performance following Startle , 1970, Perceptual and motor skills.

[11]  Howard S. Hoffman,et al.  Midbrain reticular formation involvement in the inhibition of acoustic startle , 1981, Physiology & Behavior.

[12]  K D Kryter,et al.  A preliminary study of the awakening and startle effects of simulated sonic booms. NASA CR-1193. , 1968, NASA contractor report. NASA CR. United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

[13]  J. Ison,et al.  Conditions that affect the thresholds of the components of the eyeblink reflex in humans. , 1982, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[14]  Muriel M. Woodhead,et al.  Effect of Brief Loud Noise on Decision Making , 1959 .

[15]  Howard S. Hoffman,et al.  Sensory magnitude estimation in the context of reflex modification. , 1981 .

[16]  J. Sanes Voluntary movement and excitability of cutaneous eyeblink reflexes. , 1984, Psychophysiology.

[17]  T. Blumenthal,et al.  Modification of the acoustic startle reflex by a tactile prepulse: the effects of stimulus onset asynchrony and prepulse intensity. , 1987, Psychophysiology.

[18]  Inhibition of the human eyeblink reflex: an evaluation of the sensitivity of the Wendt-Yerkes method for threshold detection. , 1977, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[19]  M. Woodhead,et al.  The Effects of Bursts of Loud Noise on a Continuous Visual Task , 1958, British journal of industrial medicine.

[20]  R. Plutchik,et al.  The effects of high intensity intermittent sound on performance, feeling, and physiology. , 1959, Psychological bulletin.

[21]  James P. Torre,et al.  The Acoustic Startle Response and Disruption of Aiming: I. Effect of Stimulus Repetition, Intensity, and Intensity Changes , 1989, Human factors.

[22]  William A. Hunt,et al.  The startle pattern , 1939 .

[23]  J. Ison,et al.  Modulation of the acoustic startle reflex in humans in the absence of anticipatory changes in the middle ear reflex. , 1979, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[24]  J. Ison,et al.  Reflex modification: A method for assessing cutaneous dysfunction , 1986, Perception & psychophysics.

[25]  Richard I. Thackray,et al.  RATE OF INITIAL RECOVERY AND SUBSEQUENT RADAR MONITORING PERFORMANCE FOLLOWING A SIMULATED EMERGENCY INVOLVING STARTLE , 1983 .