The Influence of Stimulus Deviance and Novelty on the P300 and Novelty P3
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2002
Keywords
P300, Novelty P3, Stimulus deviance, Novelty, Principal components analysis
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1111/1469-8986.3960781
Abstract
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 amplitude of the ERP components on the stimulus context. A comparison was made between the components elicited by events in the three‐stimulus, classical oddball, and novelty oddball paradigms. Responses to deviant stimuli consisted of independent and dissociable ERP components in the 400–600‐ms time range: A parietal component (P300) that was larger for targets than rare nontargets and was affected by the difficulty of discrimination, a fronto‐central component (Novelty P3) that was larger for novel tones and for rare nontargets in the difficult discrimination condition, and an additional anterior negative component responded similarly to all types of deviant stimuli.
Was this content written or created while at USF?
Yes
Citation / Publisher Attribution
Psychophysiology, v. 39, issue 6, p. 781-790
Scholar Commons Citation
Goldstein, Abraham; Spencer, Kevin M.; and Donchin, Emanuel, "The Influence of Stimulus Deviance and Novelty on the P300 and Novelty P3" (2002). Psychology Faculty Publications. 339.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/psy_facpub/339