Physiological response stereotypy is a well-established
psychophysiological construct. Unfortunately, specifying
parameters of tasks that evoke differing physiological
responses has proved difficult. We have recorded cardiovascular
activity while subjects carried out executive and attentional
tasks that differed not only psychologically but also in
their sensitivity to brain pathology and to pharmacological
manipulations. Finapres recordings were made of 30 healthy,
normal subjects (mean age 24 years) performing two tasks
involving differing aspects of sustained attention and
two tasks involving differing aspects of spatial working
memory and planning. Measures of heart rate and blood pressure,
heart rate and blood pressure variability, and their spectral
derivatives revealed differing patterns of cardiovascular
adjustment between the “attentional” and “planning”
tasks. Each test raised blood pressure, but changes in
blood pressure and heart rate variability were confined
to the attentional tasks. These findings suggest distinct
brain mechanisms subserving different forms of arousal.