1,523 results on '"event-related potential (ERP)"'
Search Results
52. Long-term practice of intuitive inquiry meditation modulates EEG dynamics during self-schema processing
- Author
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Junling Gao, Hang Kin Leung, Bonnie Wai Yan Wu, Jenny Hung, Chunqi Chang, and Hin Hung Sik
- Subjects
Event-related potential (ERP) ,Intuitive inquiry meditation (Zen Chan) ,Self-schema ,Doubt ,Belief ,EEG spectral dynamics ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Objective: Intuitive inquiry meditation is a unique form of Buddhist Zen/Chan practice in which individuals actively and intuitively utilize the cognitive functions to cultivate doubt and explore the concept of the self. This event-related potential (ERP) study aimed to investigate the neural correlates by which long-term practice of intuitive inquiry meditation induces flexibility in self-schema processing, highlighting the role of doubt and belief processes in this exploration. Methods: Twenty experienced and eighteen beginner meditators in intuitive inquiry meditation were recruited for this ERP study. The interactions of doubt and belief processes with concepts of the self and Buddha were investigated. A 128-channel electroencephalography (EEG) system was used to collect EEG data. The ERP data were processed and analyzed using EEGLAB. Results: The data showed a double dissociation between beginners and experienced meditators (monks) in the concepts of the self and Buddha: intuitive inquiry meditation reduced the brain activity of beginners when viewing Buddha image but not when viewing a picture of themselves. However, in experienced meditators, intuitive inquiry meditation reduced brain activity when they viewed images of themselves but not when they viewed Buddha image. Further event-related spectral perturbation (ERSP) analysis revealed that experienced meditators had a greater theta spectral power and higher intertrial coherence (ITC), indicating that they could more flexibly modulate ongoing cognitive processes than beginner meditators. Conclusion: Intuitive inquiry meditation could help beginner meditators detach from the concept of Buddha but not from that of the self. However, in experienced meditators, the opposite was true. ERSP analysis showed that only experienced meditators exhibited significant alterations in brain activity dynamics during intuitive inquiry meditation, which might enable these practitioners to become spontaneously detached from the concept of the self. These findings revealed the neural mechanism by which long-term practice of intuitive inquiry meditation can influence the doubting process and its effect on self-schema processing.
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- 2023
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53. Editorial: Language embodiment, volume II: interdisciplinary methodological innovations
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Laura M. Morett
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language embodiment ,research methods ,event-related potential (ERP) ,eye-tracking ,self-paced reading ,transcranial magnetic stimulation ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2023
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54. Stimulation enhancement effect of the combination of exoskeleton-assisted hand rehabilitation and fingertip haptic stimulation.
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Min Li, Jing Chen, Bo He, Guoying He, Chen-Guang Zhao, Hua Yuan, Jun Xie, Guanghua Xu, and Jichun Li
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SOMATOSENSORY cortex ,MOTOR cortex ,ROBOTIC exoskeletons ,BEHAVIORAL assessment ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,SENSORIMOTOR cortex ,PREMOTOR cortex - Abstract
Introduction: Providing stimulation enhancements to existing hand rehabilitation training methods may help stroke survivors achieve better treatment outcomes. This paper presents a comparison study to explore the stimulation enhancement effects of the combination of exoskeleton-assisted hand rehabilitation and fingertip haptic stimulation by analyzing behavioral data and event-related potentials. Methods: The stimulation effects of the touch sensations created by a water bottle and that created by cutaneous fingertip stimulation with pneumatic actuators are also investigated. Fingertip haptic stimulation was combined with exoskeleton-assisted hand rehabilitation while the haptic stimulation was synchronized with the motion of our hand exoskeleton. In the experiments, three experimental modes, including exoskeleton-assisted grasping motion without haptic stimulation (Mode 1), exoskeleton-assisted grasping motion with haptic stimulation (Mode 2), and exoskeleton-assisted grasping motion with a water bottle (Mode 3), were compared. Results: The behavioral analysis results showed that the change of experimental modes had no significant effect on the recognition accuracy of stimulation levels (p = 0.658), while regarding the response time, exoskeleton-assisted grasping motion with haptic stimulation was the same as grasping a water bottle (p = 0.441) but significantly different from that without haptic stimulation (p = 0.006). The analysis of event-related potentials showed that the primary motor cortex, premotor cortex, and primary somatosensory areas of the brain were more activated when both the hand motion assistance and fingertip haptic feedback were provided using our proposed method (P300 amplitude 9.46 µV). Compared to only applying exoskeleton-assisted hand motion, the P300 amplitude was significantly improved by providing both exoskeleton-assisted hand motion and fingertip haptic stimulation (p = 0.006), but no significant differences were found between any other two modes (Mode 2 vs. Mode 3: p = 0.227, Mode 1 vs. Mode 3: p = 0.918). Different modes did not significantly affect the P300 latency (p = 0.102). Stimulation intensity had no effect on the P300 amplitude (p = 0.295, 0.414, 0.867) and latency (p = 0.417, 0.197, 0.607). Discussion: Thus, we conclude that combining exoskeleton-assisted hand motion and fingertip haptic stimulation provided stronger stimulation on the motor cortex and somatosensory cortex of the brain simultaneously; the stimulation effects of the touch sensations created by a water bottle and that created by cutaneous fingertip stimulation with pneumatic actuators are similar. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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55. Outcome Evaluation in Social Comparison: When You Deviate from Others.
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Sun, Shinan, Wang, Yang, and Bai, Xuejun
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SOCIAL comparison , *SOCIAL skills , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *SOCIAL processes , *SOCIAL context , *SOCIAL anxiety - Abstract
Individuals often measure their performance through social comparison. With the increase in the deviation degree between the self and others, the outcome evaluation of individuals' abilities in the social comparison context is still unknown. In the current study, we used a two self-outcomes × three others' outcomes within-participant design to investigate the effect of the deviation degree of the self versus others in the social comparison context. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were measured while participants performed a three-person dot estimation task with two other people. When participants received positive results, the amplitudes of feedback-related negativity (FRN) and P300 showed a significant gradient change in the degree of deviation between the self and others (even win vs. better win vs. best win conditions). However, we did not find a similar progressive effect when participants received negative results (even loss vs. worse loss vs. worst loss conditions). These findings suggest that the deviation degree affects the primary and later processing stages of social comparison outcomes only when individuals received positive outcomes, which may reflect how people develop an empathic response to others. In contrast, people tended to avoid deeper social comparison that threatened their self-esteem when they received negative outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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56. Evaluation of Single-Trial Classification to Control a Visual ERP-BCI under a Situation Awareness Scenario.
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Fernández-Rodríguez, Álvaro, Ron-Angevin, Ricardo, Velasco-Álvarez, Francisco, Diaz-Pineda, Jaime, Letouzé, Théodore, and André, Jean-Marc
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SITUATIONAL awareness , *AIR traffic controllers , *BRAIN-computer interfaces , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) - Abstract
An event-related potential (ERP)-based brain–computer interface (BCI) can be used to monitor a user's cognitive state during a surveillance task in a situational awareness context. The present study explores the use of an ERP-BCI for detecting new planes in an air traffic controller (ATC). Two experiments were conducted to evaluate the impact of different visual factors on target detection. Experiment 1 validated the type of stimulus used and the effect of not knowing its appearance location in an ERP-BCI scenario. Experiment 2 evaluated the effect of the size of the target stimulus appearance area and the stimulus salience in an ATC scenario. The main results demonstrate that the size of the plane appearance area had a negative impact on the detection performance and on the amplitude of the P300 component. Future studies should address this issue to improve the performance of an ATC in stimulus detection using an ERP-BCI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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57. Bridging event-related potentials with behavioral studies in motor learning.
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Xueqian Deng, Chen Yang, Jingyue Xu, Mengzhan Liufu, Zina Li, and Juan Chen
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MOTOR learning ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY ,IMPLICIT learning - Abstract
Behavioral approaches and electrophysiology in understanding human sensorimotor systems have both yielded substantial advancements in past decades. In fact, behavioral neuroscientists have found that motor learning involves the two distinct processes of the implicit and the explicit. Separately, they have also distinguished two kinds of errors that drive motor learning: sensory prediction error and task error. Scientists in electrophysiology, in addition, have discovered two motor-related, event-related potentials (ERPs): error-related negativity (ERN), and feedback-related negativity (FRN). However, there has been a lack of interchange between the two lines of research. This article, therefore, will survey through the literature in both directions, attempting to establish a bridge between these two fruitful lines of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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58. Brain Activities Show There Is Nothing Like a Real Friend in Contrast to Influencers and Other Celebrities.
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Walla, Peter, Külzer, Dimitrios, Leeb, Annika, Moidl, Lena, and Kalt, Stefan
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SOCIAL media , *YOUNG adults , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *COGNITIVE neuroscience , *AFFECTIVE neuroscience - Abstract
Especially for young people, influencers and other celebrities followed on social media evoke affective closeness that in their young minds seems real even though it is fake. Such fake friendships are potentially problematic because of their felt reality on the consumer side while lacking any inversely felt true closeness. The question arises if the unilateral friendship of a social media user is equal or at least similar to real reciprocal friendship. Instead of asking social media users for explicit responses (conscious deliberation), the present exploratory study aimed to answer this question with the help of brain imaging technology. Thirty young participants were first invited to provide individual lists including (i) twenty names of their most followed and loved influencers or other celebrities (fake friend names), (ii) twenty names of loved real friends and relatives (real friend names) as well as (iii) twenty names they do not feel any closeness to (no friend names). They then came to the Freud CanBeLab (Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience and Behavior Lab) where they were shown their selected names in a random sequence (two rounds), while their brain activities were recorded via electroencephalography (EEG) and later calculated into event-related potentials (ERPs). We found short (ca. 100 ms) left frontal brain activity starting at around 250 ms post-stimulus to process real friend and no friend names similarly, while both ERPs differed from those elicited by fake friend names. This is followed by a longer effect (ca. 400 ms), where left and right frontal and temporoparietal ERPs also differed between fake and real friend names, but at this later processing stage, no friend names elicited similar brain activities to fake friend names in those regions. In general, real friend names elicited the most negative going brain potentials (interpreted as highest brain activation levels). These exploratory findings represent objective empirical evidence that the human brain clearly distinguishes between influencers or other celebrities and close people out of real life even though subjective feelings of closeness and trust can be similar. In summary, brain imaging shows there is nothing like a real friend. The findings of this study might be seen as a starting point for future studies using ERPs to investigate social media impact and topics such as fake friendship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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59. The foreign-language effect on self-positivity bias: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence.
- Author
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Zhang, Wanyu, Lan, Yuxin, Li, Qian, Gao, Zhao, Hu, Jiehui, and Gao, Shan
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NATIVE language , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *CHINESE language , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *ENGLISH as a foreign language ,CHINESE as a second language - Abstract
Previous research has shown that using foreign languages reduces cognitive biases. Here, we investigate whether this foreign-language effect extends to self-related cognition – in particular, the self-positivity bias, which refers to automatic association of oneself with positive information and has a facilitation role in maintaining mental health. We applied event-related brain potentials and oscillations in the implicit association test where Chinese–English bilinguals responded to category words (self vs. others) and attribute words (positive vs. negative) in either their native language Chinese or their foreign language English. In response to Chinese words, a self-positivity bias occurred, indexed by a positive D -score in reaction times as well as by smaller N200, larger P3-like/LPC responses, and lower alpha desynchronization when self words were associated with positive relative to negative traits. However, the bias was diminished in the English context. Overall, our findings provide important implications for language choices when self-protective mechanisms should be enhanced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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60. Study of Tactile Sensation Somatotopy and Homology Between Projected Fingers in Residual Limb and Natural Fingers in Intact Limb
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Wenyuan Liang, Changyu Qin, Aiping Sun, Xuemin Zhang, Ning Lan, and Sheng Bi
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Projected finger mapping (PFM) ,tactile sensation ,somatosensory mechanism ,transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) ,event-related potential (ERP) ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Object: Based on the comparisons of the somatosensory event-related potentials (ERPs), the object of this study is to investigate the underlying cognition mechanism of somatotopy and the homology of tactile sensation between the projected fingers in the residual limb and the natural fingers in the intact limb. Methods: One amputee subject and three able-bodied subjects were recruited. The forearm amputee had a clear projected finger mapping (PFM) that could evoke the tactile sensation of the entire five missing fingers. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) was used to evoke the sensation pattern of touch. Stimulation locations were divided into three groups: the locations of Group PA (projected-finger of amputee-subject) were located on the entire five projected fingers for the amputee subject, the locations of Group NA (natural-finger of amputee-subject) were located on the entire five natural fingers for the amputee subject, and the locations of Group NH (natural-finger of healthy-subject) were located on the bilateral natural index fingers for the able-bodied subjects. The somatosensory ERPs evoked by the stimulations were recorded. We measured the latency and amplitude of the ERP components and made statistical analyses for them. Main results: Since the ERP components of the early-stage are similar for both the stimulation in the projected fingers and the natural fingers, it can infer that the delivery pathway of the projected finger was similar to that of the natural finger. The second finding of the study is that, as the processing of sensory sensation in the cortex of the three groups is similar, it can also infer that the somatosensory evoked by the external stimuli are also similar. Conclusion: The present findings suggest that the somatotopy and the homology of tactile sensation between the projected fingers in the residual limb and the natural fingers in the intact limb have evident uniformity. We infer that the median nerve and the ulnar nerve of the peripheral nerve may divaricate new pathways, and these pathways would have been linked to the PFM.
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- 2023
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61. What Has Been Learned from Using EEG Methods in Research of ADHD?
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McLoughlin, Gráinne, Gyurkovics, Máté, Aydin, Ümit, Geyer, Mark A., Series Editor, Marsden, Charles A., Series Editor, Ellenbroek, Bart A., Series Editor, Barnes, Thomas R.E., Series Editor, Andersen, Susan L., Series Editor, Paulus, Martin P., Series Editor, Stanford, S Clare, editor, and Sciberras, Emma, editor
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- 2022
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62. Home Automation System Controlled Through Brain Activity
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Velasco-Álvarez, Francisco, Fernández-Rodríguez, Álvaro, Ron-Angevin, Ricardo, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Miesenberger, Klaus, editor, Kouroupetroglou, Georgios, editor, Mavrou, Katerina, editor, Manduchi, Roberto, editor, Covarrubias Rodriguez, Mario, editor, and Penáz, Petr, editor
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- 2022
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63. Application of Multimodal EEG in Predicting the Risk of Suicide
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Jiang, Xiaojiang, Kuang, Li, Wang, Xuefeng, editor, Li, Feng, editor, and Pan, Suyue, editor
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- 2022
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64. Prefrontal EEG slowing, synchronization, and ERP peak latency in association with predementia stages of Alzheimer’s disease.
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Jungmi Choi, Boncho Ku, Dieu Ni Thi Doan, Junwoo Park, Wonseok Cha, Kim, Jaeuk U., and Kun Ho Lee
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DEMENTIA risk factors ,PREFRONTAL cortex ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,DISEASE progression ,AUDITORY evoked response ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICAL screening ,AMYLOID plaque ,MATHEMATICAL variables ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,ODDS ratio ,NEURODEGENERATION ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: Early screening of elderly individuals who are at risk of dementia allows timely medical interventions to prevent disease progression. The portable and low-cost electroencephalography (EEG) technique has the potential to serve it. Objective: We examined prefrontal EEG and event-related potential (ERP) variables in association with the predementia stages of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Methods: One hundred elderly individuals were recruited from the GARD cohort. The participants were classified into four groups according to their amyloid beta deposition (A+ or A−) and neurodegeneration status (N+ or N−): cognitively normal (CN; A−N−, n = 27), asymptomatic AD (aAD; A + N−, n = 15), mild cognitive impairment (MCI) with AD pathology (pAD; A+N+, n = 16), and MCI with non-AD pathology (MCI(−); A−N+, n = 42). Prefrontal resting-state eyes-closed EEG measurements were recorded for five minutes and auditory ERP measurements were recorded for 8 min. Three variables of median frequency (MDF), spectrum triangular index (STI), and positive-peak latency (PPL) were employed to reflect EEG slowing, temporal synchrony, and ERP latency, respectively. Results: Decreasing prefrontal MDF and increasing PPL were observed in the MCI with AD pathology. Interestingly, after controlling for age, sex, and education, we found a significant negative association between MDF and the aAD and pAD stages with an odds ratio (OR) of 0.58. Similarly, PPL exhibited a significant positive association with these AD stages with an OR of 2.36. Additionally, compared with the MCI(-) group, significant negative associations were demonstrated by the aAD group with STI and those in the pAD group with MDF with ORs of 0.30 and 0.42, respectively. Conclusion: Slow intrinsic EEG oscillation is associated with MCI due to AD, and a delayed ERP peak latency is likely associated with general cognitive impairment. MCI individuals without AD pathology exhibited better cortical temporal synchronization and faster EEG oscillations than those with aAD or pAD. Significance: The EEG/ERP variables obtained from prefrontal EEG techniques are associated with early cognitive impairment due to AD and non-AD pathology. This result suggests that prefrontal EEG/ERP metrics may serve as useful indicators to screen elderly individuals’ early stages on the AD continuum as well as overall cognitive impairment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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65. Modality-Attention Promotes the Neural Effects of Precise Timing Prediction in Early Sensory Processing.
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Meng, Jiayuan, Li, Xiaoyu, Zhao, Yingru, Li, Rong, Xu, Minpeng, and Ming, Dong
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SENSORIMOTOR integration , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *FORECASTING , *COGNITIVE ability , *EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
Precise timing prediction (TP) enables the brain to accurately predict the occurrence of upcoming events in millisecond timescale, which is fundamental for adaptive behaviors. The neural effect of the TP within a single sensory modality has been widely studied. However, less is known about how precise TP works when the brain is concurrently faced with multimodality sensory inputs. Modality attention (MA) is a crucial cognitive function for dealing with the overwhelming information induced by multimodality sensory inputs. Therefore, it is necessary to investigate whether and how the MA influences the neural effects of the precise TP. This study designed a visual–auditory temporal discrimination task, in which the MA was allocated to visual or auditory modality, and the TP was manipulated into no timing prediction (NTP), matched timing prediction (MTP), and violated timing prediction (VTP) conditions. Behavioral and electroencephalogram (EEG) data were recorded from 27 subjects, event-related potentials (ERP), time–frequency distributions of inter-trial coherence (ITC), and event-related spectral perturbation (ERSP) were analyzed. In the visual modality, precise TP led to N1 amplitude and 200–400 ms theta ITC variations. Such variations only emerged when the MA was attended. In auditory modality, the MTP had the largest P2 amplitude and delta ITC than other TP conditions when the MA was attended, whereas the distinctions disappeared when the MA was unattended. The results suggest that the MA promoted the neural effects of the precise TP in early sensory processing, which provides more neural evidence for better understanding the interactions between the TP and MA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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66. Neural correlates of attentional orienting with neutral and fearful gaze cues in 12-month-olds.
- Author
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Matsunaka, Reiko and Hiraki, Kazuo
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GAZE , *ACTION potentials , *FACIAL expression , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *SOCIAL influence - Abstract
Infants use information on gaze direction and facial expressions for social referencing when encountering various objects in their environment. However, it remains unclear how these social cues influence attentional orienting in infants. Using event-related potentials (ERPs), we investigated the neural correlates of attentional orienting cued by an averted gaze with neutral and fearful expressions in 12-month-olds. We focused on the ERPs in response to a face (N290, P400, and Nc) as well as a saccade toward the target (the presaccadic spike potential: SP) and found that the amplitudes of the face-sensitive ERPs (N290 and P400) were larger for directed than averted gaze direction irrespective of facial expression. Furthermore, the amplitude of the SP involved in overt orienting was larger for fearful expressions than for neutral expressions, irrespective of gaze congruency. These results suggest that information on gaze direction and facial expression, specifically neutral and fearful expressions, may be processed independently, and that fearful expressions dominantly influence the neural correlates of attentional orienting in infants around 12 months of age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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67. Learning to Detect Auditory Signals in Noise: Active Top-Down Selection and Stable Change in Signal Representations.
- Author
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Wisniewski, Matthew G., Joyner, Chelsea N., Zakrzewski, Alexandria C., and Anguiano, Alexys
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Training can improve detection of auditory signals in noise. This learning could potentially occur through active top-down selection mechanisms or stable changes in signal representations. Here, participants were trained and tested (pretest vs. posttest design) on abilities to detect pure tone signals in noise. Auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) to tones were gathered under dichotic listening conditions where participants attended to nontonal stimuli in the opposite ear. Improvements in detection sensitivity were observable regardless of tested tone frequency. This was true in generalization between 861 Hz and 1058-Hz tones (Experiment 1a), and when testing a frequency range >1 octave (Experiment 2). Such learning was not apparent without training (Experiment 1b). In contrast to behavior, AEP amplitude increases from pre- to posttest were partially specific to trained tone frequencies, even when selective attention was diverted to the opposite ear of tone presentation. Placed in the context of previous work, results suggest that changes in active top-down selection mechanisms and stable signal representations both play a role in auditory detection learning. The mismatch between AEP and behavioral effects suggests a need to consider how these different learning processes can impact detection performance in the variety of listening scenarios a listener may face. Public Significance Statement: This study suggests that learning to detect sounds in noise involves multiple processes. This potentially includes changes in top-down selection and stable plasticity in neural representations of experienced sounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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68. Comparison of Two Paradigms Based on Stimulation with Images in a Spelling Brain–Computer Interface.
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Ron-Angevin, Ricardo, Fernández-Rodríguez, Álvaro, Dupont, Clara, Maigrot, Jeanne, Meunier, Juliette, Tavard, Hugo, Lespinet-Najib, Véronique, and André, Jean-Marc
- Subjects
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BRAIN-computer interfaces , *SATISFACTION , *HOME automation , *ACCURACY of information , *KNOWLEDGE transfer , *RED - Abstract
A P300-based speller can be used to control a home automation system via brain activity. Evaluation of the visual stimuli used in a P300-based speller is a common topic in the field of brain–computer interfaces (BCIs). The aim of the present work is to compare, using the usability approach, two types of stimuli that have provided high performance in previous studies. Twelve participants controlled a BCI under two conditions, which varied in terms of the type of stimulus employed: a red famous face surrounded by a white rectangle (RFW) and a range of neutral pictures (NPs). The usability approach included variables related to effectiveness (accuracy and information transfer rate), efficiency (stress and fatigue), and satisfaction (pleasantness and System Usability Scale and Affect Grid questionnaires). The results indicated that there were no significant differences in effectiveness, but the system that used NPs was reported as significantly more pleasant. Hence, since satisfaction variables should also be considered in systems that potential users are likely to employ regularly, the use of different NPs may be a more suitable option than the use of a single RFW for the development of a home automation system based on a visual P300-based speller. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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69. Interpersonal relationships modulate subjective ratings and electrophysiological responses of moral evaluations.
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Li, Jin, Li, Mei, Sun, Yu, Fan, Wei, and Zhong, Yiping
- Subjects
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INTERPERSONAL relations , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *AUTOMATICITY (Learning process) , *DATA analysis - Abstract
This study explored how interpersonal relationships modulate moral evaluations in moral dilemmas. Participants rated moral acceptability in response to altruistic (prescriptive) and selfish (proscriptive) behavior conducted by allocators (i.e., a friend or stranger), toward the participants themselves or another stranger in a modified Dictator Game (Experiments 1 and 2). Event-related potential (ERP) data were recorded as participants observed the allocators' behavior (Experiment 2). Moral acceptability ratings showed that when the allocator was a friend, participants evaluated the friend's altruistic and selfish behavior toward another stranger as being less morally acceptable than when their friend showed the respective behavior toward the participants themselves. The ERP results showed that participants exhibited more negative medial frontal negativity (MFN) amplitude whether observing a friend's altruistic or selfish behavior toward a stranger (vs. participant oneself), indicating that friends' altruistic and selfish behaviors toward strangers (vs. participants) were processed as being less acceptable at the earlier and semi-automatic processing stage in brains. However, this effect did not emerge when the allocator was a stranger in subjective ratings and MFN results. In the later-occurring P3 component, no interpersonal relationship modulation occurred in moral evaluations. These findings suggest that interpersonal relationships affect moral evaluations from the second-party perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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70. Context independent reductions in external processing during self-generated episodic social cognition.
- Author
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Simola, Jaana, Silander, Timo, Harju, Minna, Lahti, Outi, Makkonen, Emilia, Pätsi, Leea-Maria, and Smallwood, Jonathan
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SOCIAL perception ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,ATTENTION ,MENTAL imagery - Published
- 2023
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71. The domain-variant indirect association between electrophysiological response to reward and ADHD presentations is moderated by dopaminergic polymorphisms
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N. Bunford, Gy Hámori, Z. Nemoda, N. Angyal, R. Fiáth, T.É. Sebők-Welker, B. Pászthy, I. Ulbert, and J.M. Réthelyi
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ADHD ,Reward ,Gene ,Event-related potential (ERP) ,Etiopathogenesis ,Multifinality ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Background: Understanding the etiopathogenesis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may necessitate decomposition of the heterogeneous clinical phenotype into more homogeneous intermediate phenotypes. Reinforcement sensitivity is a promising candidate, but the exact nature of the ADHD-reward relation – including how, for whom, and to which ADHD dimensions atypicalities in reward processing are relevant – is equivocal. Methods: Aims were to examine, in a carefully phenotyped sample of adolescents (N = 305; Mage = 15.30 years, SD = 1.07; 39.7% girls), whether functional dopaminergic polymorphisms implicated in both reward processing and ADHD (1) are differentially associated with event-related potentials (ERPs) of reward anticipation at distinct levels of ADHD risk (nno risk = 174, nat-risk = 131, ndiagnosed = 83); and (2) moderate the indirect effect of dispositional affectivity on the association between ERPs and ADHD domains. Results: In adolescents at-risk for or with ADHD, carrying a hypodopaminergic allele was associated with enhanced ERPs of attention allocation to cue and attenuated ERPs of anticipatory attention to feedback. No associations were observed in adolescents not at-risk for or without ADHD. Controlling for age and sex, both the negative indirect effect of positive affectivity (PA) on the association between ERPs and inattention and the positive indirect effect of PA on the association between ERPs and hyperactivity/impulsivity were supported only for those with high activity dopamine transporter (DAT) alleles. Conclusions: Reward and affective processing are promising intermediate phenotypes relevant to disentangling ADHD developmental pathways. Consistent with developmental multifinality, through the successive effects of reward anticipation and positive affectivity, functional dopaminergic variants may confer protection against inattention or risk for hyperactivity/impulsivity.
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- 2023
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72. Editorial: Language embodiment, volume II: interdisciplinary methodological innovations.
- Author
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Morett, Laura M.
- Subjects
CHINESE as a second language ,TRANSCRANIAL magnetic stimulation ,LANGUAGE & languages ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGY ,RESPONSE inhibition - Published
- 2023
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73. A spatial-temporal linear feature learning algorithm for P300-based brain-computer interfaces
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Seyedeh Nadia Aghili, Sepideh Kilani, Rami N Khushaba, and Ehsan Rouhani
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Brain–computer interface (BCI) ,Event-related potential (ERP) ,Spatial-temporal features ,Discriminative restricted Boltzmann machine (DRBM) ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Speller brain-computer interface (BCI) systems can help neuromuscular disorders patients write their thoughts by using the electroencephalogram (EEG) signals by just focusing on the speller tasks. For practical speller-based BCI systems, the P300 event-related brain potential is measured by using the EEG signal. In this paper, we design a robust machine-learning algorithm for P300 target detection. The novel spatial-temporal linear feature learning (STLFL) algorithm is proposed to extract high-level P300 features. The STLFL method is a modified linear discriminant analysis technique focusing on the spatial-temporal aspects of information extraction. A new P300 detection structure is then proposed based on the combination of the novel STLFL feature extraction and discriminative restricted Boltzmann machine (DRBM) for the classification approach (STLFL + DRBM). The effectiveness of the proposed technique is evaluated using two state-of-the-art P300 BCI datasets. Across the two available databases, we show that in terms of average target recognition accuracy and standard deviation values, the proposed STLFL + DRBM method outperforms traditional methods by 33.5, 78.5, 93.5, and 98.5% for 1, 5, 10, and 15 repetitions, respectively, in BCI competition III datasets II and by 71.3, 100, 100, and 100% for 1, 5, 10, and 15 repetitions, respectively, in BCI competition II datasets II and by 67.5 ± 4, 84.2 ± 2.5, 93.5 ± 1, 96.3 ± 1, and 98.4 ± 0.5% for rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) based dataset in repetitions 1–5. The method has some advantages over the existing variants including its efficiency, robustness with a small number of training samples, and a high ability to create discriminative features between classes.
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- 2023
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74. Editorial: Language embodiment: Principles, processes, and theories for learning and teaching practices in typical and atypical readers
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Laura M. Morett
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language embodiment ,gesture ,handwriting ,metaphor ,event-related potential (ERP) ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2023
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75. Study of Tactile Sensation Somatotopy and Homology Between Projected Fingers in Residual Limb and Natural Fingers in Intact Limb.
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Liang, Wenyuan, Qin, Changyu, Sun, Aiping, Zhang, Xuemin, Lan, Ning, and Bi, Sheng
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RESIDUAL limbs ,FINGERS ,ULNAR nerve ,PHYSICAL contact ,MEDIAN nerve ,PERIPHERAL nervous system ,SENSES ,TRANSCUTANEOUS electrical nerve stimulation - Abstract
Object: Based on the comparisons of the somatosensory event-related potentials (ERPs), the object of this study is to investigate the underlying cognition mechanism of somatotopy and the homology of tactile sensation between the projected fingers in the residual limb and the natural fingers in the intact limb. Methods: One amputee subject and three able-bodied subjects were recruited. The forearm amputee had a clear projected finger mapping (PFM) that could evoke the tactile sensation of the entire five missing fingers. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) was used to evoke the sensation pattern of touch. Stimulation locations were divided into three groups: the locations of Group PA (projected-finger of amputee-subject) were located on the entire five projected fingers for the amputee subject, the locations of Group NA (natural-finger of amputee-subject) were located on the entire five natural fingers for the amputee subject, and the locations of Group NH (natural-finger of healthy-subject) were located on the bilateral natural index fingers for the able-bodied subjects. The somatosensory ERPs evoked by the stimulations were recorded. We measured the latency and amplitude of the ERP components and made statistical analyses for them. Main results: Since the ERP components of the early-stage are similar for both the stimulation in the projected fingers and the natural fingers, it can infer that the delivery pathway of the projected finger was similar to that of the natural finger. The second finding of the study is that, as the processing of sensory sensation in the cortex of the three groups is similar, it can also infer that the somatosensory evoked by the external stimuli are also similar. Conclusion: The present findings suggest that the somatotopy and the homology of tactile sensation between the projected fingers in the residual limb and the natural fingers in the intact limb have evident uniformity. We infer that the median nerve and the ulnar nerve of the peripheral nerve may divaricate new pathways, and these pathways would have been linked to the PFM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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76. 指文字画像を用いた標的選択課題遂行中の事象関連電位の特性 ̶ 脳波BMIによる定量評価手法を用いて̶
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長谷川 良平, 米田 英正, 岩月 克之, 大山 慎太郎, 佐伯 将臣, 山本 美知郎, and 平田 仁
- Abstract
We have been developing a cognitive assessment system based on an electroencephalography (EEG)-based brainmachine interface (BMI) that uses event-related potentials (ERPs) as a virtual "Mind Switch." ERPs reflect temporal changes in attention and are also known as potential biomarkers for assessing cognitive function. We recorded EEG data from 10 healthy subjects who performed target-selection tasks based upon the visual discrimination of fingerspelling images with or without motor responses (key release). We found differential responses between target and non-target images, which were quantitatively evaluated by the decoding accuracy of the target. We also found that ERPs were enhanced when accompanied by key releases, which might indicate that a more attentive state was involved. These results suggest that fingerspelling images are a feasible tool for cognitive assessment. Future studies should be conducted to demonstrate the applicability of our system in preventing frailty in older people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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77. Effect of Stimulus Size in a Visual ERP-Based BCI under RSVP.
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Fernández-Rodríguez, Álvaro, Darves-Bornoz, Aube, Velasco-Álvarez, Francisco, and Ron-Angevin, Ricardo
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GAZE , *VISUAL perception , *BRAIN-computer interfaces , *DIFFERENTIATION (Cognition) , *EYE movements - Abstract
Rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) is currently one of the most suitable paradigms for use with a visual brain–computer interface based on event-related potentials (ERP-BCI) by patients with a lack of ocular motility. However, gaze-independent paradigms have not been studied as closely as gaze-dependent ones, and variables such as the sizes of the stimuli presented have not yet been explored under RSVP. Hence, the aim of the present work is to assess whether stimulus size has an impact on ERP-BCI performance under the RSVP paradigm. Twelve participants tested the ERP-BCI under RSVP using three different stimulus sizes: small (0.1 × 0.1 cm), medium (1.9 × 1.8 cm), and large (20.05 × 19.9 cm) at 60 cm. The results showed significant differences in accuracy between the conditions; the larger the stimulus, the better the accuracy obtained. It was also shown that these differences were not due to incorrect perception of the stimuli since there was no effect from the size in a perceptual discrimination task. The present work therefore shows that stimulus size has an impact on the performance of an ERP-BCI under RSVP. This finding should be considered by future ERP-BCI proposals aimed at users who need gaze-independent systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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78. A time-frequency denoising method for single-channel event-related EEG.
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Wenqiang Yan and Yongcheng Wu
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HILBERT-Huang transform ,SIGNAL denoising ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,TIME-frequency analysis ,FOURIER transforms - Abstract
Introduction: Electroencephalogram (EEG) acquisition is easily affected by various noises, including those from electrocardiogram (ECG), electrooculogram (EOG), and electromyogram (EMG). Because noise interference can significantly limit the study and analysis of brain signals, there is a significant need for the development of improved methods to remove this interference for more accurate measurement of EEG signals. Methods: Based on the non-linear and non-stationary characteristics of brain signals, a strategy was developed to denoise brain signals using a time-frequency denoising algorithm framework of short-time Fourier transform (STFT), bidimensional empirical mode decomposition (BEMD), and non-local means (NLM). Time-frequency analysis can reveal the signal frequency component and its evolution process, allowing the elimination of noise according to the signal and noise distribution. BEMD can be used to decompose the time-frequency signals into sub-time-frequency signals for noise removal at different scales. NLM relies on structural selfsimilarity to locally smooth an image to remove noise and restore its main geometric structure, making this method appropriate for time-frequency signal denoising. Results: The experimental results show that the proposed method can effectively suppress the high-frequency components of brain signals, resulting in a smoother brain signal waveform after denoising. The correlation coefficient of the reference signal, a superposition average of multiple trial signals, and the original single trial signal was determined, and then correlation coefficients were calculated between the reference signal and single trial signals processed by time-frequency denoising, ensemble empirical mode decomposition (EEMD)-independent component analysis (ICA), EEMD-canonical correlation analysis (CCA), and wavelet threshold denoising methods. The correlation coefficient was highest for the signal processed by the time-frequency denoising method and the reference signal, indicating that the single trial signal after time-frequency denoising was most similar to the waveform of the reference signal and suggesting this is a feasible strategy to effectively reduce noise and more accurately determine signals. Discussion: The proposed time-frequency denoising method exhibits excellent performance with promising potential for practical application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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79. The influence of job burnout on the attention ability of army soldiers and officers: Evidence from ERP.
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Lin Wu, Yanfeng Chen, Xufeng Liu, Peng Fang, Tingwei Feng, Kewei Sun, Lei Ren, Wei Liang, Huijie Lu, Xinxin Lin, Yijun Li, Lingling Wang, Chenxi Li, Tian Zhang, Chunping Ni, and Shengjun Wu
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ARMY officers ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,PARIETAL lobe ,COGNITIVE training ,MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Job burnout is one of the most widespread mental problems in today's society and seriously affects the mental health and combat effectiveness of soldiers and officers. Herein, the effect of burnout on individual attention is studied from the perspective of neuroelectrophysiology. A total of 1,155 army soldiers and officers were included in this investigation and completed the Job Burnout Scale for Military Personnel. A total of 42 soldiers and officers were randomly selected from those with and without burnout to participate in an event-related potential (ERP) study using a visual oddball task. The characteristics of visual P3a and P3b at Fz, FCz, Cz, CPz, and Pz were recorded and analyzed by repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA). P < 0.05 was the criterion for a significant difference. The total average score on the Job Burnout Scale for Military Personnel among the participants was 0.74 ± 0.46, and the detection rate of job burnout was 29.85%. In the Oddball task, the average number of target stimuli counted in the burnout group was lower than that in the control group, but no significant difference was found. For P3a, the Fz, FCz, Cz, CPz, and Pz amplitudes in the burnout group were significantly lower than those in the control group. The average amplitude of P3a evoked in the central parietal area was larger than that in the prefrontal area. For P3b, the amplitudes of the five electrodes in the burnout group were significantly lower than those in the control group. The average amplitude of P3b evoked in the parietal region was larger than those in the prefrontal and central parietal regions. A certain degree of job burnout is evident in army soldiers and officers. The voluntary attention and involuntary attention of individuals with burnout are both affected to some extent, as reflected by the lower amplitudes of P3a and P3b. The results suggest that P3a and P3b can be used as indicators to monitor cognitive neural function in soldiers and officers with burnout and can also be used as references for evaluating the effects of cognitive training and screening methods. In this study, ERP was used to research the attention ability of soldiers and officers with job burnout, and related issues were discussed from the aspects of the burnout results, behavioral results, ERP results, compensation effect of cognitive resources, application in the military field, limitations, and prospects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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80. Savoring mental imagery: Electrocortical effects and association with depression.
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Jackson, Lauren E., Wilson, Kayla A., and MacNamara, Annmarie
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MENTAL imagery , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *MENTAL depression , *EMOTION regulation , *WELL-being - Abstract
The ability to focus on and increase positive emotion in response to mental imagery may play a key role in emotional wellbeing. Moreover, deficits in this ability might underlie emotional disorders such as depression. Here, we set out to determine whether people could use savoring to upregulate subjective and electrocortical response to mental imagery of previously viewed positive and neutral pictures, and whether this would be negatively affected by depression. On each trial, participants (N = 49) viewed a positive or neutral picture, prior to simply re-imagining the previously presented picture ("view") or re-imagining the picture while savoring it ("savor"). Results showed that savoring increased electrocortical and subjective response to imagined stimuli; however, this effect was only evident at the electrocortical level when controlling for depression. Moreover, depression moderated electrocortical findings, such that individuals who were more depressed showed a reduced effect of savoring on neural response to mental imagery. Results are in line with recent work that has shown the benefits of positive affect treatment for depression, to suggest that deficits in savoring mental imagery may play a role in the development and/or maintenance of depression. • Savoring of mental imagery may be essential to everyday emotion regulation. • Participants savored or simply imagined previously presented pictures during EEG. • Controlling for depression, savoring increased neural response, ratings of imagery. • Depression moderated findings, showing an association with impaired savoring. • Reduced ability to savor mental imagery may play a role in depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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81. Differences in EEG Event-Related Potentials during Dual Task in Parkinson’s Disease Carriers and Non-Carriers of the G2019S-LRRK2 Mutation
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Eden Shkury, Shani Danziger-Schragenheim, Zoya Katzir, Yael Ezra, Nir Giladi, Anat Mirelman, and Inbal Maidan
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Parkinson’s disease ,cognition ,LRRK2 ,electroencephalography (EEG) ,event-related potential (ERP) ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
Background: The G2019S-LRRK2 gene mutation is a common cause of hereditary Parkinson’s disease (PD), associated with a higher frequency of the postural instability gait difficulty (PIGD) motor phenotype yet with preserved cognition. This study investigated neurophysiological changes during motor and cognitive tasks in PD patients with and without the G2019S-LRRK2 mutation. Methods: 33 iPD patients and 22 LRRK2-PD patients performed the visual Go/NoGo task (VGNG) during sitting (single-task) and walking (dual-task) while wearing a 64-channel EEG cap. Event-related potentials (ERP) from Fz and Pz, specifically N200 and P300, were extracted and analyzed to quantify brain activity patterns. Results: The LRRK2-PD group performed better in the VGNG than the iPD group (group*task; p = 0.05). During Go, the iPD group showed reduced N2 amplitude and prolonged N2 latency during walking, whereas the LRRK2-PD group showed only shorter latency (group*task p = 0.027). During NoGo, opposite patterns emerged; the iPD group showed reduced N2 and increased P3 amplitudes during walking while the LRRK2-PD group demonstrated increased N2 and reduced P3 (N2: group*task, p = 0.010, P3: group*task, p = 0.012). Conclusions: The LRRK2-PD group showed efficient early cognitive processes, reflected by N2, resulting in greater neural synchronization and prominent ERPs. These processes are possibly the underlying mechanisms for the observed better cognitive performance as compared to the iPD group. As such, future applications of intelligent medical sensing should be capable of capturing these electrophysiological patterns in order to enhance motor–cognitive functions.
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- 2023
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82. The Levels of Auditory Processing during Emotional Perception in Children with Autism
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Galina V. Portnova, Ivan V. Skorokhodov, and Larisa A. Mayorova
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electroencephalography (eeg) ,crying ,laughter ,phoneme ,peak alpha frequency ,event-related potential (erp) ,n400 ,late positivity (lp) ,p270 ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background: The perception of basic emotional sounds, such as crying and laughter is associated with effective interpersonal communication. Difficulties with the perception and analysis of sounds that complicate understanding emotions at an early development age may contribute to communication deficits. Methods: This study focused on auditory nonverbal emotional perception including emotional vocalizations with opposite valences (crying and laughter) and neutral sound (phoneme “Pᴂ”). We conducted event-related potential analysis and compared peak alpha frequencies (PAFs) for different conditions in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and typically developing (TD) children aged 4 to 6 years old (N = 25 for each group). Results: Children with ASD had a higher amplitude of P100 and lower amplitude of N200 for all types of sounds and higher P270 in response to neutral phoneme. During the perception of emotional sounds, children with ASD demonstrated a single P270 electroencephalography (EEG) component instead of a P200–P300 complex specific to TD children. However, the most significant differences were associated with a response to emotional valences of stimuli. The EEG differences between crying and laughter were expressed as a lower amplitude of N400 and higher PAF for crying compared to laughter and were found only in TD children. Conclusions: Children with ASD have shown not just abnormal acoustical perception but altered emotional analysis of affective sounds as well.
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- 2023
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83. A Novel Binary BCI Systems Based on Non-oddball Auditory and Visual Paradigms
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Saparbayeva, Madina, Shomanov, Adai, Lee, Min-Ho, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Mantoro, Teddy, editor, Lee, Minho, editor, Ayu, Media Anugerah, editor, Wong, Kok Wai, editor, and Hidayanto, Achmad Nizar, editor
- Published
- 2021
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84. Taxonomized Auditory Distractions with Varying Intensity Levels and Their Effect on a Visual P300 Speller While Utilising Low-Cost off-the-Shelf Equipment
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Schembri, Patrick, Pelc, Mariusz, Ma, Jixin, Filipe, Joaquim, Editorial Board Member, Ghosh, Ashish, Editorial Board Member, Prates, Raquel Oliveira, Editorial Board Member, Zhou, Lizhu, Editorial Board Member, Escalona, Maria Jose, editor, Ramirez, Andres Jimenez, editor, Silva, Hugo Plácido, editor, Constantine, Larry, editor, Helfert, Markus, editor, and Holzinger, Andreas, editor
- Published
- 2021
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85. Electroencephalography and Brain–Computer Interfaces
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Müller-Putz, Gernot, Wriessnegger, Selina C., Müller-Putz, Gernot, editor, and Rupp, Rüdiger, editor
- Published
- 2021
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86. Task-Related Component Analysis Combining Paired Character Decoding for Miniature Asymmetric Visual Evoked Potentials
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Yusong Zhou, Banghua Yang, and Cuntai Guan
- Subjects
Brain-computer interfaces (BCI) ,event-related potential (ERP) ,task-related component analysis (TRCA) ,paired character decoding (PCD) ,asymmetric visual evoked potentials (aVEPs) ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Brain-computer interface (BCI) technology based on event-related potentials (ERP) of electroencephalography (EEG) is widely used in daily life and medical treatment. However, the research of identifying the miniature and more informative asymmetric visual evoked potentials (aVEPs), which belongs to ERP, needs further exploration. Herein, a task-related component analysis combining paired character decoding (TRCA-PCD) method, which can enhance reproducibility of aVEPs in multiple trials and strengthen the features of different samples, was designed to realize fast decoding of aVEPs. The BCI performance and the influence of repetition times between the TRCA-PCD method, the discriminative canonical pattern matching (DCPM) method and traditional task-related component analysis (TRCA) method were compared using a 32-class aVEPs dataset recorded from 32 subjects. The highest average recognition accuracy and information transfer rate (ITR) of TRCA-PCD after parameter selection were $70.37~\pm ~2.49$ % (DCPM: $64.91~\pm ~2.81$ %, TRCA: $44.01~\pm ~3.25$ %) with the peak value of 97.92% and $28.90~\pm ~3.83$ bits/min (DCPM: $21.29~\pm ~3.35$ bits/min, TRCA: $11.54~\pm ~2.81$ bits/min) with the peak value of 94.55 bits/min respectively. Statistical analysis indicated that the highest average recognition rate could be obtained when the repetition time was six, and the highest ITR could be obtained when the repetition time was one. Overall, the results verified the effectiveness and superiority of TRCA-PCD in recognition of aVEPs and provided a reference for parameter selection. Therefore, the TRCA-PCD method can promote the further application of aVEPs in the BCI speller field.
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- 2022
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87. Toward Assessment of Sound Localization in Disorders of Consciousness Using a Hybrid Audiovisual Brain–Computer Interface
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Jun Xiao, Yanbin He, Tianyou Yu, Jiahui Pan, Qiuyou Xie, Caiyun Cao, Heyi Zheng, Weitian Huang, Zhenghui Gu, Zhuliang Yu, and Yuanqing Li
- Subjects
Hybrid brain-computer interface (hBCI) ,event-related potential (ERP) ,disorders of consciousness (DOC) ,sound localization ,behavioral assessment ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Behavioral assessment of sound localization in the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R) poses a significant challenge due to motor disability in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC). Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), which can directly detect brain activities related to external stimuli, may thus provide an approach to assess DOC patients without the need for any physical behavior. In this study, a novel audiovisual BCI system was developed to simulate sound localization evaluation in CRS-R. Specifically, there were two alternatively flashed buttons on the left and right sides of the graphical user interface, one of which was randomly chosen as the target. The auditory stimuli of bell sounds were simultaneously presented by the ipsilateral loudspeaker during the flashing of the target button, which prompted patients to selectively attend to the target button. The recorded electroencephalography data were analyzed in real time to detect event-related potentials evoked by the target and further to determine whether the target was attended to or not. A significant BCI accuracy for a patient implied that he/she had sound localization. Among eighteen patients, eleven and four showed sound localization in the BCI and CRS-R, respectively. Furthermore, all patients showing sound localization in the CRS-R were among those detected by our BCI. The other seven patients who had no sound localization behavior in CRS-R were identified by the BCI assessment, and three of them showed improvements in the second CRS-R assessment after the BCI experiment. Thus, the proposed BCI system is promising for assisting the assessment of sound localization and improving the clinical diagnosis of DOC patients.
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- 2022
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88. Does hand position affect orienting when no action is required? An electrophysiological study
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Catherine L. Reed, John P. Garza, William S. Bush, Natasha Parikh, Niti Nagar, and Shaun P. Vecera
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attention ,embodied attention ,orienting ,haptic ,encephalography (EEG) ,event-related potential (ERP) ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Previous research has shown that attention can be biased to targets appearing near the hand that require action responses, arguing that attention to the hand facilitates upcoming action. It is unclear whether attention orients to non-targets near the hand not requiring responses. Using electroencephalography/event-related potentials (EEG/ERP), this study investigated whether hand position affected visual orienting to non-targets under conditions that manipulated the distribution of attention. We modified an attention paradigm in which stimuli were presented briefly and rapidly on either side of fixation; participants responded to infrequent targets (15%) but not standard non-targets and either a hand or a block was placed next to one stimulus location. In Experiment 1, attention was distributed across left and right stimulus locations to determine whether P1 or N1 ERP amplitudes to non-target standards were differentially influenced by hand location. In Experiment 2, attention was narrowed to only one stimulus location to determine whether attentional focus affected orienting to non-target locations near the hand. When attention was distributed across both stimulus locations, the hand increased overall N1 amplitudes relative to the block but not selectively to stimuli appearing near the hand. However, when attention was focused on one location, amplitudes were affected by the location of attentional focus and the stimulus, but not by hand or block location. Thus, hand position appears to contribute only a non-location-specific input to standards during visual orienting, but only in cases when attention is distributed across stimulus locations.
- Published
- 2023
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89. The effects of grammatical gender on the processing of occupational role names in Slovene: An event-related potential study
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Jasna Mikić Ljubi, Andraž Matkovič, Jurij Bon, and Aleksandra Kanjuo Mrčela
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N400 ,P600 ,match-mismatch paradigm ,grammatical gender ,Slovene language ,event-related potential (ERP) ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The event-related potential method has proven to be a useful tool for studying the effects of gender information in language. Studies have shown that mismatch between the antecedent and the following referent triggers two ERP components, N400 and P600. In the present study, we investigated how grammatical gender affects the mental representation of the grammatical subject. A match-mismatch paradigm was used to investigate how masculine grammatical gender and gender-balanced forms (the explicit mention of masculine and feminine forms as word pairs) as role nouns affect the processing of the referent in Slovenian. The morphological complexity of Slovenian language required the use of anaphoric verbs instead of nouns/pronouns, on which previous research was based. The results showed that following both the gender-balanced and the masculine generic forms, P600 (but not N400) was observed in response to the feminine verb but not to the masculine verb. The P600 amplitude was smaller in the case of the gender-balanced form than in the case of the masculine generic form only. We have concluded that gender-balanced forms are more open to feminine continuations than masculine generic forms. This is the first ERP study in Slovenian to address the effects of processing grammatical gender, thus contributing to existing research on languages with grammatical gender. The great strength of the study is that it is one of the first ERP studies to test the mental inclusivity of gender-balanced forms.
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- 2022
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90. Foreign language learning and the mismatch negativity (MMN): A longitudinal ERP study
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Andreas Højlund, Nynne Thorup Horn, Stine Derdau Sørensen, William B. McGregor, and Mikkel Wallentin
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Mismatch negativity (MMN) ,Event-related potential (ERP) ,Longitudinal ,Foreign language learning ,Speech perception ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
An early component of the auditory event-related potential (ERP), the mismatch negativity (MMN), has been shown to be sensitive to native phonemic sound contrasts. The potential changes to this neural sensitivity from foreign language learning have only been marginally studied. The existing research seems to suggest that the neural sensitivity as indexed by the MMN can adapt to foreign language sound contrasts with very target-specific training, but whether the effects are long-lasting or generalize to proper foreign language learning is yet to be investigated in a viable longitudinal study design. We therefore recorded electroencephalography (EEG) from two groups of language officer cadets (learning either Arabic (n = 8) or Dari (n = 12)) while they listened to speech sound contrasts from both languages. We recorded their EEG four times over the course of 19 months of intensive foreign language training (immediately before they started, after three weeks, after six months, and after 19 months).We did not find any language-specific effects of learning on the cadets’ MMNs to the speech sound contrasts. We did, however, elicit statistically reliable MMNs to both sound contrasts for both groups at most of the four times of measurement. Furthermore, we found that the Arabic learners’ MMNs to the Arabic stimuli diminished over time, and that the Dari learners’ P3a responses to the Arabic stimuli diminished over time. Correlating the participants’ MMNs with their behavioral responses to the language stimuli did not reveal any strong links between behavior and neurophysiology. However, those Dari learners whose MMNs to the Dari stimuli increased the most within the first three weeks, also received the highest grades on a listening task after 17 weeks.
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- 2022
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91. Alterations in the neural correlates of affective inhibitory control following cognitive behavioral therapy for depression: A Canadian biomarker integration network for depression (CAN-BIND) study
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Prabhjot Dhami, Lena C. Quilty, Benjamin Schwartzmann, Rudolf Uher, Timothy A. Allen, Stefan Kloiber, Raymond W. Lam, Glenda MacQueen, Benicio N. Frey, Roumen Milev, Daniel J. Müller, Susan Rotzinger, Sidney H. Kennedy, and Faranak Farzan
- Subjects
Major depressive disorder (MDD) ,Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) ,Inhibitory control ,Response inhibition ,Electroencephalography (EEG) ,Event-related potential (ERP) ,Mental healing ,RZ400-408 - Abstract
Background: Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is an efficacious treatment for depression. CBT may in part exert its therapeutic effect by strengthening inhibitory control (IC). However, the relationship between CBT and IC has yet to be thoroughly explored; in particular, it is not clear whether IC is modulated following a course of CBT. Methods: Forty-one adults with depression were recruited to undergo sixteen weeks of CBT; data from twenty-five healthy controls were used for baseline comparisons. Participants completed an affective Go/No-go task, a measure of IC, while undergoing electroencephalography recording. Electroencephalography measures of interest were the event-related potential (ERP) N2 and P3 components. Results: At baseline, individuals with depression exhibited greater ERP amplitudes during the N2 regardless of affective condition; source reconstruction attributed this to patients exhibiting greater activity in the superior frontal gyrus, right temporal lobe, and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). Following treatment, the ERP amplitude during the N2 component decreased for angry stimuli but increased for happy stimuli. Source reconstruction attributed ERP changes in the angry-condition to the left occipital and fusiform gyrus, and changes in the happy-condition to regions including the superior frontal gyrus and ACC. Limitations: There was no placebo-treatment group. Conclusions: Neural correlates of the affective Go/No-go task were altered in depression and were found to be selectively modulated over the course of CBT in a condition- and region-specific manner. These findings support the notion that the modulation of IC may be one of the potential therapeutic mechanisms of CBT in the treatment of depression.
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- 2022
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92. Largely unaffected auditory and visual sensory processing phenotypes in the evoked potentials of Fmr1 KO2 mice.
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Kat, Renate and Kas, Martien J. H.
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SENSORIMOTOR integration , *AUDITORY evoked response , *VISUAL evoked response , *FRAGILE X syndrome , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *AUTISM spectrum disorders , *VISUAL evoked potentials , *AUDITORY processing disorder - Abstract
Sensory sensitivity symptoms are common in autism spectrum disorders and fragile X syndrome. Mainly in the auditory modality, disturbed processing has been found in both fragile X patients and the corresponding genetic mouse model, the Fmr1 knockout mouse. Here, we tried to replicate the auditory deficits and assess whether also visual processing is affected, using electroencephalography readouts under freely behaving conditions in the second‐generation Fmr1 knockout mice. No differences between wild‐type and knockout animals were found in single auditory and visual evoked potentials in response to pure sine tones and full‐field light flashes. Visual sensory gating was enhanced in the early but not the late components of the evoked potentials, but no changes were found in auditory sensory gating. The higher harmonics of the synchronisation response to flickering visual stimuli seemed to be reduced with 10, but not 20 or 40 Hz, stimulation. However, this effect was not reproduced in an independent second cohort of animals. No synchronisation differences were found in response to a chirp stimulus, of which the frequency steadily increased. Taken together, this study could not reproduce earlier reported increased amplitudes in auditory responses, nor could it convincingly show that synchronisation deficits found to be present in the auditory modality also existed in the visual modality. The discrepancies within this study as well as between various studies assessing sensory processing in the Fmr1 KO raise questions about the external validity of these phenotypes and warrant careful interpretation of these phenotypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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93. Brain-computer interface (BCI)-generated speech to control domotic devices.
- Author
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Velasco-Álvarez, Francisco, Fernández-Rodríguez, Álvaro, and Ron-Angevin, Ricardo
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BRAIN-computer interfaces , *TELECOMMUNICATION systems , *AMYOTROPHIC lateral sclerosis , *SMART television devices , *SPEECH synthesis , *HOME automation , *LIGHT bulbs - Abstract
A brain-computer interface (BCI) is a type of technology that establishes a communication channel between a user and certain devices in the environment via the brain signals of the user. The UMA-BCI Speller tool allows for easy configuration of a BCI, permitting it to be manipulated without the need for much technical knowledge. However, adapting a BCI system so that it can communicate with devices is a challenging task. A simpler technology that is increasingly used to enable communication with devices in the environment is based on voice commands. The aim of the present work is therefore to create a system to facilitate communication between a BCI and devices in the environment using voice commands. Twelve healthy participants and three amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients were asked to control a BCI home automation system. The devices to be controlled were a television, an air conditioner, a smart light bulb, a smart plug, and the WhatsApp and Spotify apps. Performance measures were recorded, and subjective measures were collected based on the System usability scale, NASA-TLX and ad hoc questionnaires. The results of this study validate the proposed system as a suitable option to facilitate communication between a BCI and commercial devices that have been previously adapted to operate based on voice commands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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94. Short-Term Habituation of Auditory N1 in Spoken Word-Forms Is Modulated by Phonological Information.
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Yue, Jinxing, Wang, Peng, Li, Jiayin, Li, Zhipeng, Liang, Xia, and He, Yifei
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HABITUATION (Neuropsychology) , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *AUDITORY evoked response , *NATIVE language , *PHONOLOGY - Abstract
Short-term auditory habituation is typically reflected by decreased but recoverable amplitudes of the N1 component of event-related potentials to repeated stimuli. It remains less well understood whether and how N1 habituation is modulated by the human cognition. The current study aims to further test for the potential modulatory roles of phonological information carried by spoken word-forms. Two phonological variables, namely lexicality (real versus pseudoword-form) and usage frequency (high versus low frequency), are considered and combined factorially, yielding four types of monosyllabic Mandarin spoken word-forms. Each type consists of 10 items (i.e., word-forms). The stimuli were passively presented to native Mandarin speakers in trains of five (S1–S5), while their EEG was recorded. The peak amplitudes of N1 to the same type of speech stimuli were calculated for each position by averaging the trains extracted from the EEG recording. Then, the N1 habituation was quantified for the two electrodes of interest (C3 and C4) in each repetitive presentation position (S2–S5). The results showed that the N1 habituation in low-frequency pseudo word-forms was consistently greater than in low-frequency real word-forms and high-frequency pseudo word-forms, respectively, at the fourth presentation (S4). The results suggest the first evidence that different types of phonological information (i.e., lexicality and usage frequency) modulate N1 habituation, interactively. Sensory filtering is proposed as a candidate mechanism for mediating between the processing of phonological information and the short-term habituation of auditory N1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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95. Epigenetic Effects in HPA Axis Genes Associated with Cortical Thickness, ERP Components and SUD Outcome.
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Hill, Shirley Y., Wellman, Jeannette L., Zezza, Nicholas, Steinhauer, Stuart R., Sharma, Vinod, and Holmes, Brian
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HYPOTHALAMIC-pituitary-adrenal axis , *ALCOHOLISM , *EPIGENETICS , *CORTICOTROPIN releasing hormone , *YOUNG adults , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) - Abstract
Association between familial loading for alcohol use disorders (AUD) and event-related potentials (ERPs) suggests a genetic basis for these oscillations though much less is known about epigenetic pathways influenced by environmental variation. Early life adversity (ELA) influences negative outcomes much later in life. The stress-activated neuropeptide corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) contributes to the deleterious effects of ELA on brain structure and function in animals. Accordingly, we hypothesized that ELA would be related to cortical thickness and electrophysiological characteristics through an epigenetic effect on CRH receptor type-1 (CRHR1) methylation. A total of 217 adolescent and young adult participants from either multiplex alcohol dependence or control families were scanned using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 3T and cortical thickness was determined. Longitudinal follow-up across childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood provided developmental ERP data and measures of adversity. Blood samples for genetic and epigenetic analyses were obtained in childhood. Cortical thickness and visual ERP components were analyzed for their association and tested for familial risk group differences. Visual P300 amplitude at Pz and cortical thickness of the left lateral orbitofrontal region (LOFC), were significantly related to risk group status. LOFC cortical thickness showed a negative correlation with CRHR1 methylation status and with childhood total stress scores from the Life Stressors and Social Resources Inventory (LISRES). Stress scores were also significantly related to P300 amplitude recorded in childhood. The present results suggest that early life adversity reflected in greater total LISRES stress scores in childhood can impact the methylation of the CRHR1 gene with implications for brain development as seen in cortical thickness and electrophysiological signals emanating from particular brain regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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96. Auditory N100 amplitude deficits predict conversion to psychosis in the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study (NAPLS-2) cohort.
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Duncan, Erica, Roach, Brian J., Massa, Nicholas, Hamilton, Holly K., Bachman, Peter M., Belger, Aysenil, Carrion, Ricardo E., Johannesen, Jason K., Light, Gregory A., Niznikiewicz, Margaret A., Addington, Jean M., Bearden, Carrie E., Cadenhead, Kristin S., Cannon, Tyrone D., Cornblatt, Barbara A., McGlashan, Thomas H., Perkins, Diana O., Tsuang, Ming, Walker, Elaine F., and Woods, Scott W.
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PSYCHOSES , *LONGITUDINAL method , *ECONOMIC stimulus , *AUDITORY perception , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *RESEARCH funding , *NORTH Americans , *EARLY diagnosis - Abstract
Background: The auditory N100 is an event related potential (ERP) that is reduced in schizophrenia, but its status in individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis (CHR) and its ability to predict conversion to psychosis remains unclear. We examined whether N100 amplitudes are reduced in CHR subjects relative to healthy controls (HC), and this reduction predicts conversion to psychosis in CHR.Methods: Subjects included CHR individuals (n = 552) and demographically similar HC subjects (n = 236) from the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study. Follow-up assessments identified CHR individuals who converted to psychosis (CHRC; n = 73) and those who did not (CHR-NC; n = 225) over 24 months. Electroencephalography data were collected during an auditory oddball task containing Standard, Novel, and Target stimuli. N100 peak amplitudes following each stimulus were measured at electrodes Cz and Fz.Results: The CHR subjects had smaller N100 absolute amplitudes than HC subjects at Fz (F(1,786) = 4.00, p 0.046). A model comparing three groups (CHRC, CHR-NC, HC) was significant for Group at the Cz electrode (F(2,531) = 3.58, p = 0.029). Both Standard (p = 0.019) and Novel (p = 0.017) stimuli showed N100 absolute amplitude reductions in CHR-C relative to HC. A smaller N100 amplitude at Cz predicted conversion to psychosis in the CHR cohort (Standard: p = 0.009; Novel: p = 0.001) and predicted shorter time to conversion (Standard: p = 0.013; Novel: p = 0.001).Conclusion: N100 amplitudes are reduced in CHR individuals which precedes the onset of psychosis. N100 deficits in CHR individuals predict a greater likelihood of conversion to psychosis. Our results highlight N100's utility as a biomarker of psychosis risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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97. Rural and urban disparities in selective attention in Chinese young adults: An event-related potential study.
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Shifeng Li, Zhen Yang, Cuicui Wang, and Qiongying Xu
- Abstract
Previous studies showed that attention system and its underlying neural mechanisms were profound affected by social inequalities. However, previous studies on social inequalities were mainly focused on family-based factors, such as parental education, parental occupation, and household income. In the present study, we investigated the neural mechanisms underlying more broader social context (e.g., rural verse urban) disparities in selective attention among young adults in China. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from 22 college students who had born and grown up in rural areas and 22 students who had born and grown up in urban areas during an auditory selective attention task. Although behavioral performance was not significantly different between groups, attentional differences in the negativity difference (Nd) were significantly larger in the urban group than the rural group. Whole sample analysis with hierarchical regression showed that rural/urban status still made a significant contribution to the prediction of Nd amplitudes even after the effects of age, sex, and various family SES measures (include parents' educational levels and annual household income) were controlled for. These findings represent a first step toward understanding the ways in which broad social environmental factors shape the neural basis of selective attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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98. Automatic change detection: Mismatch negativity and the now-classic Rensink, O'Reagan, and Clark (1997) stimuli.
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File, Domonkos, Petro, Bela, Gaál, Zsófia Anna, Csikós, Nóra, and Czigler, István
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EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,ECONOMIC stimulus - Abstract
Change blindness experiments had demonstrated that detection of significant changes in natural images is extremely difficult when brief blank fields are placed between alternating displays of an original and a modified scene. On the other hand, research on the visual mismatch negativity (vMMN) component of the event-related potentials (ERPs) identified sensitivity to events (deviants) different from the regularity of stimulus sequences (standards), even if the deviant and standard events are non-attended. The present study sought to investigate the apparent controversy between the experience under the change blindness paradigm and the ERP results. To this end, the stimulus of Rensink, O'Reagen, and Clark (1997) was adapted to a passive oddball ERP paradigm to investigate the underlying processing differences between the standard (original) and deviant (altered) stimuli measured in 22 subjects. Posterior negativity within the 280-330 ms latency range emerged as the difference between ERPs elicited by standard and deviant stimuli, identified as visual mismatch negativity (vMMN). These results raise the possibility that change blindness is not based on the lack of detailed visual representations or the deficiency of comparing two representations. However, effective discrimination of the two scene versions requires considerable frequency differences between them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. Event-Related Potential-Based Brain–Computer Interface Using the Thai Vowels' and Numerals' Auditory Stimulus Pattern.
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Borirakarawin, Manorot and Punsawad, Yunyong
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BRAIN-computer interfaces , *ACOUSTIC stimulation , *VOWELS , *NUMERALS , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) - Abstract
Herein, we developed an auditory stimulus pattern for an event-related potential (ERP)-based brain–computer interface (BCI) system to improve control and communication in quadriplegia with visual impairment. Auditory stimulus paradigms for multicommand electroencephalogram (EEG)-based BCIs and audio stimulus patterns were examined. With the proposed auditory stimulation, using the selected Thai vowel, similar to the English vowel, and Thai numeral sounds, as simple target recognition, we explored the ERPs' response and classification efficiency from the suggested EEG channels. We also investigated the use of single and multi-loudspeakers for auditory stimuli. Four commands were created using the proposed paradigm. The experimental paradigm was designed to observe ERP responses and verify the proposed auditory stimulus pattern. The conventional classification method produced four commands using the proposed auditory stimulus pattern. The results established that the proposed auditory stimulation with 20 to 30 trials of stream stimuli could produce a prominent ERP response from Pz channels. The vowel stimuli could achieve higher accuracy than the proposed numeral stimuli for two auditory stimuli intervals (100 and 250 ms). Additionally, multi-loudspeaker patterns through vowel and numeral sound stimulation provided an accuracy greater than 85% of the average accuracy. Thus, the proposed auditory stimulation patterns can be implemented as a real-time BCI system to aid in the daily activities of quadratic patients with visual and tactile impairments. In future, practical use of the auditory ERP-based BCI system will be demonstrated and verified in an actual scenario. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. Can the Mismatch Negativity Really Be Elicited by Abstract Linguistic Contrasts?
- Author
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Politzer-Ahles S and Jap BAJ
- Abstract
The mismatch negativity (MMN) is an event-related potential component that reflects pre-attentive change detection in the brain. As an electrophysiological index of processing that responds to differences in incoming consecutive stimuli, the MMN can be elicited through, for example, the presentation of two different categories of sounds in an oddball paradigm where sounds from the "standard" category occur frequently and sounds from the "deviant" category occur rarely. The specificity of what can elicit the MMN is yet to be fully defined. Here we test whether the MMN can be generated by an abstract linguistic contrast with no reliable acoustic cue. Previous studies have shown that the way in which an acoustic cue is used to elicit MMN is influenced by linguistic knowledge, but have not shown that a nonacoustic, abstract linguistic contrast can itself elicit MMN. In this study, we test the strongest interpretation of the claim that the MMN can be generated through a purely linguistic contrast by contrasting tenses in ablauting irregular English verbs (where there is no reliable acoustic cue for tense). We find that this contrast elicits a negativity, as do other linguistic contrasts previously shown to elicit MMN (a contrast between phonologically voiced and phonologically voiceless segments and a purely acoustic contrast between aspirated and unaspirated segments). The findings provide evidence that the MMN is indeed sensitive to purely abstract linguistic categories., Competing Interests: Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (© 2024 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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