Search Results
Results 401 - 450 of 705
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Paavilainen Petri - - 2003
The processing of abstract stimulus features in the human brain was studied by presenting the subjects with frequent standard tone pairs and infrequent deviant tone pairs. Both pairs varied randomly over a wide frequency and/or intensity range, there being no physically constant standard stimulus. The common feature of the standard ...
Welge-Lüssen Antje - - 2003
This study investigated the test-retest reliability of chemosensory event-related potentials in humans. Olfactory event-related potentials and chemosomatosensory event-related potentials were evaluated in 20 healthy, normosmic subjects. Phenyl ethyl alcohol (PEA, 40% v/v) and H(2)S (4 ppm) served as olfactory stimuli whereas CO(2) (60% v/v) was the chemosomatosensory stimulus. Fifteen stimuli ...
Ojanen Ville - - 2003
Visual awareness was studied in 11 subjects by using coherent and scrambled objects as stimuli. The stimuli were presented near the subjective perceptual threshold. Explicitly recognized stimuli elicited a specific negative ERP deflection peaking at 460 ms. Our reaction time experiment suggests that this visual awareness negativity (VAN) is similar ...
Yordanova Juliana - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: Following external stimulation, electroencephalographic (EEG) responses from different frequency bands occur simultaneously, but little is known about whether and how concurrent multi-frequency responses depend on each other during stimulus information processing. The present study assessed the effects of task stimulus relevance on locally co-existent time-frequency components of event-related brain ...
Johnstone Stuart J - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: Previous time-frequency studies have indicated that event-related low-frequency activity has important effects on component topography and developmental effects in auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) of children and adolescents. This study investigated the influence of event-related slow-wave (SW) (0.01-2 Hz) activity in the group differences seen between children with and without ...
Rosburg Timm - - 2003
The aim of the current study was to differentiate the sources of neuromagnetic mismatch negativity (MMNm) to deviants of different features. For this purpose, the MMNm of twenty-one healthy subjects (seven males) were recorded left-hemispherically. Subjects were stimulated monaurally in an oddball paradigm with standard tones of 1000 Hz and ...
Frasnelli Johannes - - 2003
Few data are available on the relation of EEG-derived trigeminal event-related potentials (ERPs) to stimulus duration or stimulus concentration. Thus, the aim of this study was to analyze the relation between ERP components and both stimulus duration and stimulus concentration. Twenty healthy young subjects participated. Trigeminal ERPs were recorded after ...
Roeber Urte - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: The present study addresses the question of whether behavioral and electrophysiological effects obtained with the auditory distraction paradigm proposed by Schröger et al. [Clin Neurophysiol 2000;111:1450] depend on the timing of stimulus occurrence. METHODS: Subjects had to discriminate the duration of tones. Occasionally, task-irrelevant frequency changes were used as ...
Arnott Stephen R - - 2002
In this report we present neurophysiological evidence that spatial separation between attended and unattended sound sources influences a listener's ability to register changes in sounds presented outside the focus of attention. Standard and deviant stimuli were presented at three azimuth locations. Participants were asked to press a key whenever they ...
Armstrong Brooke A - - 2002
Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in response to color changes of isoluminant, high spatial frequency gratings and to motion of grayscale, low spatial frequency gratings in 11 normally hearing and 11 congenitally deaf adults. The stimuli were designed to activate preferentially the ventral and dorsal streams of visual processing, respectively. ...
Goldstein Abraham - - 2002
This study examined the relationship between ERP components elicited by deviant stimuli by disentangling the P300 and Novelty P3 components, using spatiotemporal principal components analysis and a dense electrode array. The three-tone paradigm was used and the pitch attributes of the tones were systematically manipulated so as to map the ...
Di Russo F - - 2002
OBJECTIVE: Steady-state visual evoked potentials (VEPs) were recorded to study the mechanisms that underlie visual attention. METHODS: VEPs were recorded from 1 cycle/degree sinusoidal grating contrast reversed at various temporal frequencies (6-10 Hz). This was displayed in one hemifield. A letter search display was flashed at a random rate in ...
McKeown Martin J - - 2002
As the limits of stimuli presentation rates are explored in event-related fMRI design, there is a greater need to assess the implications of averaging raw fMRI data. Selective averaging assumes that the fMRI signal consists of task-dependent signal, random noise, and non-task dependent brain signal that can be modeled as ...
Benvenuto James - - 2002
Evoked response potentials (ERPs) to brief flashes of light were analyzed for constituent features that could be used to distinguish individuals with Alzheimer's disease (AD, n = 15) from matched control subjects (n = 17). Statistical k nearest-neighbor methods distinguished AD from control with a maximum sensitivity of 29% and ...
Tillman Gail - - 2002
A temporal compound is a complex pattern associated with a sequence of brief (30-100 msec) acoustic events whose identity can be distinguished but whose order cannot be reported. In the present study, two frequency glides were concatenated to form a 400-msec temporal compound consisting of 10 40-msec glides. Fourteen young ...
McCaslin Devin L - - 2002
This investigation was conducted to determine whether an exogenous event-related potential called the mismatch negativity (MMN) would change systematically in response to frequency-modulated signals with varying temporal properties. Both N1 and P2 waveforms were recorded for 50-ms frequency-modulated signals from normal hearing listeners. The standard stimuli for this investigation were ...
Barnes G R - - 2002
It has been established that repeated presentation of a transient target motion stimulus such as a constant-velocity ramp leads to the build up of steady state (SS), anticipatory smooth pursuit eye movements after two or three presentations. Each SS response is then composed of the anticipatory component of nonvisual origin, ...
Müller Matthias M - - 2002
Visual attention enables observers to extract and process high-priority information in the visualfield. Controversy remains as to whether or not observers can ignore information that falls within the spatial beam of attention. We used an objective physiological measure, the steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP), to investigate this question. A stream ...
Ceponiene Rita - - 2002
Behavioral research has produced little evidence on sound feature discrimination in neonates. Sensory processes underlying sound perception can be studied using the mismatch negativity (MMN) component of auditory event-related potentials (ERPs), which is not contingent on conscious perception and response. Thus, MMN is suitable for studying newborns, who are difficult ...
Rosburg T - - 2002
The equivalent source of the neuromagnetic auditory evoked field (AEF) component N100m shifts systematically within its latency range. In the current study, possible effects of stimulus duration on this shift were analysed. 15 subjects were stimulated monaurally with tones of different duration (50, 100, 200 ms) and AEFs were recorded ...
Rohde Mitchell M - - 2002
Our goal is to develop a direct brain interface (DBI) that will provide communication and environmental control to persons who are "locked-in" (or nearly so) as a consequence of brainstem stroke, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or other etiologies. Previously we demonstrated that templates constructed from trigger averaged event-related potentials (ERPs) ...
Salisbury Dean F - - 2002
Both the amplitude and latency of P300 vary with changes in stimulus parameters. Stimuli at intensities or pitch separations near threshold evoke a smaller and later P300. P300 is also affected by extraneous stimulus parameters in tasks where stimulus frequency separation is large and stimuli are well above intensity thresholds. ...
Webster Kate E - - 2002
The present study investigated the effect of target stimulus probability on the P3 component of the respiratory-related evoked potential (RREP). A single respiratory stimulus paradigm was employed where normal breaths served as standard stimuli and occluded breaths presented at various probability levels served as target stimuli. EEG was recorded from ...
Kubová Z - - 2002
Visual cognitive responses (P300) to moving stimuli were tested in 36 subjects with the aim to find the normal range of P300 parameters. Concomitantly, the circadian intra-individual variability of the P300 was studied in a subgroup of 6 subjects. Visual stimuli consisted of either coherent (frequent stimulus) or non-coherent motion ...
Oka S - - 2001
The possibility of a link between medial axes (hereafter called symmetries) and figure salience has recently been proposed [Vision Res. 38 (1998) 2323; Vision Res. 38 (1998) 2429]. In this paper we investigated the characteristics of transient visual evoked potentials (VEPs) associated with stimulus figures designed to have different symmetries. ...
Sannita W G - - 2001
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the time dynamics and phase relationship with the stimulus of the onset/offset visual evoked potentials (VEPs), P300 and gamma band oscillatory responses to visual (contrast) stimulation. Gamma band oscillatory activity mediates in sensory and cognitive operations, with a role in stimulus-related cortical synchronization, but is reportedly reduced ...
Sekine A - - 2001
The present study examined the nature of the negative shift of event-related potential (ERP) recorded during the fully awake state, wakefulness with minor awareness deficit (light drowsiness) and stage 1 of NREM sleep. The cortical responses evoked by two types of auditory stimuli were recorded in nine subjects at the ...
Kujala T - - 2001
OBJECTIVES: The relation of the mismatch negativity (MMN) elicitation with behavioral stimulus discrimination as well as the replicability of the MMN was evaluated for intervals between paired tones. METHODS: The MMN, obtained in a passive oddball paradigm in two sessions separated by 4-21 days and behavioral responses (button presses to ...
Trainor L J - - 2001
We show that the mismatch negativity (MMN) component of the event-related potential can be used to measure auditory temporal resolution in human infants. Infrequent stimuli with silent gaps of 4, 8, or 12 ms modulated the P2 component, generated MMN, and produced a P3a-like positivity. The data indicate that within-channel ...
Hoshiyama M - - 2001
We investigated the somatosensory evoked cortical magnetic field (SEF) components corresponding to the somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) components between 20 and 30 ms after median nerve stimulation. SEP and SEF were simultaneously recorded after right median nerve stimulation in seven healthy subjects. Twenty single-sweep epochs of SEF and SEP were ...
Demiralp T - - 2001
Event related brain potential (ERP) waveforms consist of several components extending in time, frequency and topographical space. Therefore, an efficient processing of data which involves the time, frequency and space features of the signal, may facilitate understanding the plausible connections among the functions, the anatomical structures and neurophysiological mechanisms of ...
Bandini F - - 2001
OBJECTIVES: We investigated whether the transient pattern onset and offset visual evoked potential (VEP) can distinguish between patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and normal subjects. METHODS: Two horizontal sinusoidal gratings differing in spatial frequency, i.e. 1 and 4 cycles per degree, were presented to 17 patients with PD and 16 ...
Baker S N - - 2001
It is often of interest experimentally to assess how synchronization between two neurons changes following a stimulus or other behaviorally relevant marker. The joint peristimulus time histogram (JPSTH) achieves this, but assumes that changes in the cells' firing rate following the stimulus are stereotyped from one sweep to the next. ...
Daffner K R - - 2001
BACKGROUND: Patients with mild to moderate AD often are apathetic and fail to attend to novel aspects of their environment. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the mechanisms underlying these changes by studying the novelty P3 response that measures shifts of attention toward novel events. METHODS: While event-related potentials were recorded, mildly impaired ...
Leocani L - - 2001
OBJECTIVES: To study cortical activity in different motor tasks, we compared event-related desynchronization (ERD) and event-related potentials (ERPs) in different reaction time (RT) paradigms with the time course of corticospinal excitability. METHODS: Nine right-handed, normal subjects performed right or left thumb extensions in simple, choice and go/no go auditory RT ...
Castro A - - 2001
The relationships among stimulus relevance and the position of target stimuli in a sequence with the P300 component of event related brain potentials and reaction time were investigated. An auditory oddball series was presented to 42 healthy, young, right-handed female participants. In the series, participants were to ignore the standard ...
Han S - - 2001
The current study aimed to investigate the effect of attentional selection of distinctive local elements on the processing of hierarchically organized patterns. Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded from subjects during identifications of global or local shapes of hierarchical patterns where either all local elements were identical (homogeneous stimulus) or ...
Wheaton K J - - 2001
Monkey electrophysiological and human neuroimaging studies indicate the existence of specialized neural systems for the perception and execution of actions. To date, the dynamics of these neural systems in humans have not been well studied. Here, we investigated the spatial and temporal behavior of human neural responses elicited to viewing ...
Wunderlich J L - - 2001
This study investigated, first, the effect of stimulus frequency on mismatch negativity (MMN), N1, and P2 components of the cortical auditory event-related potential (ERP) evoked during passive listening to an oddball sequence. The hypothesis was that these components would show frequency-related changes, reflected in their latency and magnitude. Second, the ...
Heinrich S P - - 2001
Recording a VEP usually involves prolonged repetitions of the stimulus, but the influence of adaptation is rarely discussed in this context. Two experiments were performed. In Experiment 1 the time course of the response amplitude during steady-state stimulation was assessed. During the first seconds of stimulation we found an increase ...
Le T H - - 2001
fMRI of human auditory cortex response to sinusoidal tones of 200, 1000, and 3000 Hz was evaluated using block design and conventional and "silent" event-related designs. Conventional event-related fMRI revealed the timecourse of the BOLD response (approximately 5 sec to peak, approximately 4 sec full-width-half-max, and approximately 14 sec recovery ...
Houston R J - - 2001
The present study was conducted to examine psychophysiological differences in arousability among individuals who display impulsive aggressive outbursts. Amplitude and latency for the mid-latency evoked potentials (P1, N1 and P2) were obtained at scalp electrode sites. The evoking stimuli were three intensities (low, medium, high) of photic stimulation. Compared to ...
Masago R - - 2001
The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of the hedonic properties of odors and the attention of subjects on components of the olfactory event-related potentials (OERP). The subjects were seven healthy male students. Two odors (orange and eugenol) of different hedonic properties were presented to the subjects ...
Takegata R - - 2001
In the present study we investigated the relationship between detecting violations of structural regularities of tone sequences and detecting deviations from temporal regularities or repetitive spectral auditory stimulus features. Twelve subjects were presented with randomized sequences of two tones (differing both in frequency and intensity) delivered alternately to the left ...
Browne M - - 2000
A challenging task in psychophysiology is the extraction of event-related potentials (ERPs) from the background electro-encephalogram. The task is made more difficult by the properties of ERPs, which typically consist of multiple features of variable latency, localised in time and frequency. A novel technique is described for analysis of ERPs, ...
Gorea A - - 2000
Perceptual studies make a clear distinction between sensitivity and decision criterion. The former is taken to characterize the processing efficiency of the underlying sensory system and it increases with stimulus strength. The latter is regarded as the manifestation of a subjective operation whereby individuals decide on (as opposed to react ...
Nakajima Y - - 2000
OBJECTIVES: This study attempts to elucidate the relative contributions of exogenous and endogenous components to the N140 and P300 potentials elicited by somatosensory stimulation. METHODS: Somatosensory event-related potentials (ERPs) were evoked using an odd-ball paradigm with the frequent (80%) stimuli delivered to the left index finger and the infrequent (20%) ...
Nakajima Y - - 2000
Event-related potentials (ERPs) evoked by somatosensory stimuli were studied in two experiments with manipulation of the interstimulus interval (ISI) in the range from 1 to 4 seconds and the stimulus probability from 10 to 50% in fine steps. All the stimuli were presented randomly on both index fingers as odd-ball ...
Sasaki T - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to compare the automatic detection of deviance in introverts and extraverts. Event-related potentials were recorded to standard and deviant stimuli. These were presented either rapidly or slowly. Stimuli that are presented slowly may intrude into consciousness. METHODS: Twenty subjects were tested and divided ...
Trillenberg P - - 2000
OBJECTIVES: Uncertainty about the timing of a known external event is an everyday phenomenon but has been rarely investigated with electrophysiological methods. We studied how the amplitude of the contingent negative variation (CNV) is affected by temporal variation of S2 presentation. Competing hypotheses about the development of CNV during the ...
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