scholarly journals Human gender differences in an emotional visual oddball task: an event-related potentials study

2004 ◽  
Vol 367 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Campanella ◽  
M Rossignol ◽  
S Mejias ◽  
F Joassin ◽  
P Maurage ◽  
...  
2005 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Mejias ◽  
M. Rossignol ◽  
D. Debatisse ◽  
E. Streel ◽  
L. Servais ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eunchan Na ◽  
Kanghee Lee ◽  
Eun Ji Kim ◽  
Jong Bin Bae ◽  
Seung Wan Suh ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: While identifying Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) in its early stages is crucial, traditional neuropsychological tests tend to lack sensitivity and specificity for its diagnosis. Based on the early visual attention deficits of adults with AD, which are apparent before cognitive deficits emerge, this study aimed to investigate visual attentional characteristics of adults with AD, from pre-attentive to attentive processing, using a visual oddball task and event-related potentials (ERPs).Methods: Cognitively normal elderly controls (NC, n=27) and patients with probable AD (AD, n=10) were recruited. Participants performed a three-stimulus visual oddball task and were asked to press a designated button in response to the target stimuli. The amplitudes of 4 ERPs were analyzed. Visual mismatch-negativity (vMMN) was analyzed around the parieto-occipital and temporo-occipital regions. P3a was analyzed around the fronto-central regions, whereas P3b was analyzed around the centro-parietal regions.Results: Late vMMN amplitudes of the AD group were significantly smaller than those of the NC group, while early vMMN amplitudes were comparable. Compared to the NC group, P3a amplitudes of the AD group were significantly smaller for the infrequent deviant stimuli but the amplitudes for the standard stimuli were comparable. Lastly, the AD group had significantly smaller P3b amplitudes than the NC group.Conclusion: Our findings imply that AD patients exhibit pre-attentive visual processing deficits, known to affect later higher-order brain functions. In a clinical setting, the visual oddball paradigm could be used to provide helpful diagnostic information since pre-attentive ERPs can be induced by passive exposure to infrequent stimuli.


1990 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 258-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta Kutas ◽  
Steven A. Hillyard ◽  
Bruce T. Volpe ◽  
Michael S. Gazzaniga

The lateral distribution of the P300 component of the event-related brain potential (ERP) was studied in five epileptic patients whose corpus callosum had been surgically sectioned and in seven neurologically intact controls. The P300 was elicited in an auditory “oddball” task using high- and low-pitched tones and in a visual oddball task in which target words were presented either to the left or right visual fields, or to both fields simultaneously. Commissurotomy altered the normal pattern of bilaterally symmetrical P300 waves over the left and right hemispheres, but in a different manner for auditory and visual stimuli. The auditory P3 to binaural tones was larger in amplitude over the right than the left hemisphere for the patients. In the visual task, the laterality of the P300 varied with the visual field of the target presentation. Left field targets elicited much larger P300 amplitudes over the right than the left hemisphere, as did bilateral targets. In contrast, right field targets triggered P300 waves of about the same amplitude over the two hemispheres. The overall amplitude of the P300 to simultaneous bilateral targets was less than the sum of the individual P300 amplitudes produced in response to the unilateral right and left field targets. These shifts in P300 laterality argue against the view that the P300 is an index of diffuse arousal or activation that is triggered in both hemispheres simultaneously irrespective of which hemisphere processes the target information. The results further demonstrate that the P300 does not depend for its production on interhemispheric comparisons of information mediated by the corpus callosum, as suggested recently by Knight et al. (1989).


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