Visual mismatch negativity: the detection of stimulus change
- 1 March 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in NeuroReport
- Vol. 15 (4) , 659-663
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001756-200403220-00017
Abstract
Mismatch negativity is an event related potential generated by a mechanism which detects stimulus change. Such a mechanism is important to enable attention to be switched to important changes in the environment. The effect has been extensively studied in the auditory modality. The present investigation was designed to establish whether the enhanced negativity in the visual event related potential evoked by deviant stimuli presented infrequently among a sequence of repeated standard stimuli is really associated with the detection of stimulus change. The experiment set out to distinguish effects associated with stimulus change from those related to the physical attributes of the stimuli or to differences in the refractory state of receptors or neurons. The findings support the hypothesis that deviance-related negativity reflects the operation of a change detection mechanism and not the refractory state of elements of the visual system.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Detection of visual changeNeuroReport, 2003
- Memory‐based detection of task‐irrelevant visual changesPsychophysiology, 2002
- Mismatch negativity of the color modality during a selective attention task to auditory stimuli in children with mental retardationBrain & Development, 2002
- A modified oddball paradigm “cross-modal delayed response” and the research on mismatch negativityBrain Research Bulletin, 2002
- Mismatch negativity in the visual modalityNeuroReport, 1999
- Cerebral Generators of Mismatch Negativity (MMN) and Its Magnetic Counterpart (MMNm) Elicited by Sound ChangesEar & Hearing, 1995
- The role of attention in auditory information processing as revealed by event-related potentials and other brain measures of cognitive functionBehavioral and Brain Sciences, 1990
- Do event-related potentials reveal the mechanism of the auditory sensory memory in the human brain?Neuroscience Letters, 1989
- Processing negativity: An evoked-potential reflection.Psychological Bulletin, 1982
- Invariance of the contrast evoked potential with changes in retinal illuminanceVision Research, 1979