Psychophysiological “preparatory” responses
may or may not depend on a focused expectation of when
a stimulus will occur. Changes in heart rate, pupillary
diameter, and brain potentials were examined during trials
in which foreperiod of a simple reaction time (RT) task
was fixed or unpredictable. Trials were also included in
which stimuli for the speeded motor reaction were triggered
by psychophysiological changes occurring spontaneously
in the foreperiod. Thirty-two college-aged volunteers equally
divided by gender participated in the experiment. Reducing
expectancy, by using nonaging foreperiods, eliminated transient
prestimulus psychophysiological responses but failed to
eliminate slow changes over the foreperiod—slowing
of heart rate, dilation of the pupil, and cortical surface
negativity. Triggering the reaction stimulus by physiological
changes did not influence RT. Correlations between psychophysiological
changes in the foreperiod and between these changes and
RT were generally low. The results were consistent with
a multiprocess view of preparation.