This study examined the effects of visual selective attention
and stimulus discriminability on phasic heart rate changes.
Grating stimuli consisting of four vertical bars were presented
left or right from fixation. Participants attended to one side
of the screen and responded with a button press to attended
target stimuli that were defined by shorter middle bars. Stimulus
discriminability was manipulated by increasing the length of
the middle bars of targets. To examine the time course of response
inhibition, participants had to respond to auditory probe stimuli
that were presented occasionally and unpredictably at varying
intervals following the visual stimulus. Responses to targets
and probes following attended nontargets were slower in the
difficult condition. Heart rate slowed in anticipation of a
target and accelerated back to baseline afterwards. Phase-dependent
cardiac slowing was larger for attended nontargets compared
to unattended nontargets and was more pronounced in the difficult
condition. These findings were interpreted vis-à-vis
inhibition accounts of phase-dependent cardiac slowing.