The effectiveness of different types of auditory
prepulses in eliciting skin conductance orienting and in
producing prepulse inhibition (PPI) of the acoustic startle
eyeblink was studied in two experiments. A discrete white
noise prepulse produced greater PPI than either a continuous
white noise, a discrete tone, or a continuous tone. The
discrete white noise advantage was not due to similarity
in bandwidth to the startle pulse or to a refractory effect
of the prepulse. Moreover, a dissociation between PPI and
skin conductance orienting was seen in both experiments.
PPI using auditory prepulses appears to be dependent primarily
on the acoustic characteristics of the transient portion
of the prepulse, whereas skin conductance orienting is
more dependent on the sustained portions of the stimulus.