Stimulus deviance and evoked potentials. 1982

R Näätänen, and M Simpson, and N E Loveless

In many studies on the effect of selective attention and stimulus significance on evoked potentials, the target, or otherwise significant, stimuli were also infrequent stimuli. Repetitive homogeneous auditory stimuli were presented at short constant intervals. One of two deviant stimuli, one slightly lower and the other slightly higher in pitch than the repetitive stimulus ('standard'), randomly replaced it at the same low probability. One at a time of these two physically equally deviant and equally infrequent stimuli was designated as a target and the subject's task was to count its number in a run and to ignore the other deviant stimulus. The two deviant stimuli elicited very similar potentials; hence, no target effect was obtained. On the other hand, both potentials were much larger and more complex than those elicited by standard stimuli. Additionally, a 'probe' stimulus, a widely deviant auditory stimulus randomly replaced, with a very small probability, a standard stimulus in these conditions. Even this irrelevant, physically widely deviant, stimulus elicited a wave complex basically similar to that elicited by slightly deviant stimuli, but of much larger amplitude. The comparison of these brain-wave sequences to those elicited by the same stimuli in reading subjects led to the conclusion that in detection conditions, deviant stimuli elicit two overlapping sequences of brain events: exogeneous and endogeneous. The former sequence, mainly including the processes producing the N1 and the N2 (neuronal mismatch) components, is an automatic, inflexible set of brain processes which appears as if providing a central-level stimulus to the endogeneous sequence. The latter seems to include a triphasic frontocentral complex overlapping the mismatch N2 and preceding the parietal late positive component and frontal late negative component. This endogeneous set of brain waves was regarded as a sign of detection of stimulus deviance. Consequently, it did not occur in response to the slightly deviant stimuli in reading, but the widely deviant stimuli which were also (involuntarily) perceived by the subject tended to elicit it in attenuated and delayed form.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D010897 Pitch Discrimination The ability to differentiate sound frequency or pitch. Discrimination, Pitch,Pitch Discriminations
D011930 Reaction Time The time from the onset of a stimulus until a response is observed. Response Latency,Response Speed,Response Time,Latency, Response,Reaction Times,Response Latencies,Response Times,Speed, Response,Speeds, Response
D004193 Discrimination Learning Learning that is manifested in the ability to respond differentially to various stimuli. Discriminative Learning,Discrimination Learnings,Discriminative Learnings,Learning, Discrimination,Learning, Discriminative
D004292 Dominance, Cerebral Dominance of one cerebral hemisphere over the other in cerebral functions. Cerebral Dominance,Hemispheric Specialization,Dominances, Cerebral,Specialization, Hemispheric
D004569 Electroencephalography Recording of electric currents developed in the brain by means of electrodes applied to the scalp, to the surface of the brain, or placed within the substance of the brain. EEG,Electroencephalogram,Electroencephalograms
D005072 Evoked Potentials, Auditory The electric response evoked in the CEREBRAL CORTEX by ACOUSTIC STIMULATION or stimulation of the AUDITORY PATHWAYS. Auditory Evoked Potentials,Auditory Evoked Response,Auditory Evoked Potential,Auditory Evoked Responses,Evoked Potential, Auditory,Evoked Response, Auditory,Evoked Responses, Auditory,Potentials, Auditory Evoked
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000293 Adolescent A person 13 to 18 years of age. Adolescence,Youth,Adolescents,Adolescents, Female,Adolescents, Male,Teenagers,Teens,Adolescent, Female,Adolescent, Male,Female Adolescent,Female Adolescents,Male Adolescent,Male Adolescents,Teen,Teenager,Youths

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