Pharmacological Enhancement of Dopamine Neurotransmission Does Not Affect Illusory Pattern Perception.

Elke Smith, Simon Michalski, Kilian Knauth, Deniz Tuzsus, Hendrik Theis, Thilo van Eimeren, Jan Peters
Author Information
  1. Elke Smith: Department of Psychology, Biological Psychology, University of Cologne, Cologne 50969, Germany e.smith@uni-koeln.de. ORCID
  2. Simon Michalski: Department of Psychology, Biological Psychology, University of Cologne, Cologne 50969, Germany.
  3. Kilian Knauth: Department of Psychology, Biological Psychology, University of Cologne, Cologne 50969, Germany.
  4. Deniz Tuzsus: Department of Psychology, Biological Psychology, University of Cologne, Cologne 50969, Germany.
  5. Hendrik Theis: Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, Department of Nuclear Medicine, University of Cologne, 50937 Cologne, Germany.
  6. Thilo van Eimeren: Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, Department of Nuclear Medicine, University of Cologne, 50937 Cologne, Germany.
  7. Jan Peters: Department of Psychology, Biological Psychology, University of Cologne, Cologne 50969, Germany. ORCID

Abstract

Psychotic symptoms and delusional beliefs have been linked to dopamine transmission in both healthy and clinical samples and are assumed to result at least in part from perceiving illusory patterns in noise. However, the existing literature on the role of dopamine in detecting patterns in noise is inconclusive. To address this issue, we assessed the effect of manipulating dopaminergic neurotransmission on illusory pattern perception in healthy individuals (= 48, = 19 female) in a double-blind placebo-controlled within-subjects design (see preregistration at https://osf.io/a4k9j/). We predicted individuals on versus off ʟ-DOPA to be more likely to perceive illusory patterns, specifically objects in images containing only noise. Using a signal detection model, however, we found no credible evidence that ʟ-DOPA compared with placebo increased false alarm rates. Further, ʟ-DOPA did not reliably modulate measures of accuracy, discrimination sensitivity, and response bias. In all cases, Bayesian statistics revealed strong evidence in favor of the null hypothesis. The task design followed previous work on illusory pattern perception and comprised a limited number of items per condition. The results therefore need to be interpreted with caution, as power was limited. Future studies should address illusory pattern perception using more items and take into account potential dose-dependent effects and differential effects in healthy versus clinical samples.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Humans
Female
Male
Double-Blind Method
Adult
Illusions
Dopamine
Young Adult
Levodopa
Synaptic Transmission
Dopamine Agents
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Bayes Theorem

Chemicals

Dopamine
Levodopa
Dopamine Agents

Word Cloud

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