نتایج جستجو برای: novelty p3

تعداد نتایج: 30238  

Journal: :basic and clinical neuroscience 0
mohammad amin khoshlessan1 niavaran bldg., niavaran square, tehran, iran, p. o. box 19395-5746, tel: +98 21 2229 4035, fax: +98 21 2228 0352, email: [email protected] p300 & object color knowledge sadra sadeh medical school, iran university of medical sciences reza nilipour medical school, iran university of medical sciences, department of speech therapy, university of social welfare and rehabilitation sciences

a b s t r a c t introduction: in an oddball experiment, the context in which novel stimuli are presented affects characteristics of novelty p3, i.e. as long as there is a difficult task in which the difference between standard and target stimuli is small, recurrent presentation of a highly discrepant stimulus can lead to p300 highly similar to novelty p3. effect of stimulus properties on p300 h...

Journal: :Scientific Reports 2016

2016
Robert J. Barry Genevieve Z. Steiner Frances M. De Blasio

P300 (or P3) is a major positive complex in the human event-related potential, occurring some 300 ms after stimulus onset, and long thought to be the cortical correlate of the Orienting Reflex, our automatic attention-grabbing response to a novel stimulus. The Novelty P3 was the third P3 subcomponent discovered (after P3a and P3b) and appeared promising in its sensitivity to stimulus novelty, t...

Journal: :International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology 2002
S Debener C Kranczioch C S Herrmann A K Engel

An auditory novelty-oddball task, which is known to evoke a P3 event-related potential (ERP) in a target condition and a novelty-P3 ERP in response to task-irrelevant unique environmental sounds, was repeatedly applied to healthy participants (n = 14) on two separate recording sessions, 7 days apart. Both target-P3 and novelty-P3 were internally consistent and test-retest reliable. Interestingl...

Mohammad Amin Khoshlessan1, Reza Nilipour, Sadra Sadeh,

A B S T R A C T Introduction: In an oddball experiment, the context in which novel stimuli are presented affects characteristics of novelty P3, i.e. as long as there is a difficult task in which the difference between standard and target stimuli is small, recurrent presentation of a highly discrepant stimulus can lead to P300 highly similar to novelty P3. Effect of stimulus properties on P300 h...

Journal: :Stroke 2004
Shingo Yamagata Shuhei Yamaguchi Shotai Kobayashi

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Apathy is associated with decreased novelty-seeking behaviors and is a prevailing behavioral symptom after stroke affecting cortical and subcortical regions. We studied the relationship between apathetic state after subcortical stroke and neural orienting response to novel events using an event-related evoked potential (ERP) technique. METHODS Twenty-nine patients with ...

Journal: :Behavioral neuroscience 2014
Judith Schomaker Rinske Roos Martijn Meeter

Novelty is often prioritized and detected automatically. It attracts attention-eliciting the orienting response. However, novelty is not a unitary concept, and the extent to which the orienting response is elicited depends on several factors. In the present study we investigated how stimulus novelty, deviance from the context, and complexity of the stimulus context contribute to the anterior N2...

Journal: :Journal of cognitive neuroscience 2006
Francisco Barceló Carles Escera María-José Corral Jose A. Periáñez

The abrupt onset of a novel event captures attention away from, and disrupts, ongoing task performance. Less obvious is that intentional task switching compares with novelty-induced behavioral distraction. Here we explore the hypothesis that intentional task switching and attentional capture by a novel distracter both activate a common neural network involved in processing contextual novelty [B...

Journal: :Psychophysiology 1998
D Friedman V A Kazmerski Y M Cycowicz

The effects of attention were assessed on novelty P3 amplitude and scalp distribution elicited by environmental sounds in young and elderly volunteers who participated in either actively attended or ignored oddball conditions. For the young, novelty P3 amplitude decreased with time on task during both attend and ignore sequences. Amplitude decrements were greatest at frontal sites during the at...

Journal: :Brain research. Cognitive brain research 2005
Stefan Debener Scott Makeig Arnaud Delorme Andreas K Engel

To better understand whether voluntary attention affects how the brain processes novel events, variants of the auditory novelty oddball paradigm were presented to two different groups of human volunteers. One group of subjects (n=16) silently counted rarely presented 'infrequent' tones (p=0.10), interspersed with 'novel' task-irrelevant unique environmental sounds (p=0.10) and frequently presen...

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