The P300 as a Marker of Waning Attention and Error Propensity
Open Access
- 1 January 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Hindawi Limited in Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience
- Vol. 2007, 1-9
- https://doi.org/10.1155/2007/93968
Abstract
Action errors can occur when routine responses are triggered inappropriately by familiar cues. Here, EEG was recorded as volunteers performed a “go/no-go” task of long duration that occasionally and unexpectedly required them to withhold a frequent, routine response. EEG components locked to the onset of relevant go trials were sorted according to whether participants erroneously responded to immediatelysubsequentno-go trials or correctly withheld their responses. Errors were associated with a significant relative reduction in the amplitude of the preceding P300, that is, a judgement could be made bout whether a response-inhibition error was likely before it had actually occurred. Furthermore, fluctuations in P300 amplitude across the task formed a reliable associate of individual error propensity, supporting its use as a marker of sustained control over action.Keywords
Funding Information
- Medical Research Council (U.1055.01.003.00001.01, RO1 HL079937-01)
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enhancing the Sensitivity of a Sustained Attention Task to Frontal Damage: Convergent Clinical and Functional Imaging EvidenceNeurocase, 2003
- Interactions of focal cortical lesions with error processing: Evidence from event-related brain potentials.Neuropsychology, 2002
- `Oops!': Performance correlates of everyday attentional failures in traumatic brain injured and normal subjectsPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- Towards a cognitive neuroscience of consciousness: basic evidence and a workspace frameworkCognition, 2001
- The absent mind: further investigations of sustained attention to responseNeuropsychologia, 1999
- The selection and suppression of actionNeuroReport, 1999
- Cortical Localization of Human Sustained Attention: Detection with Functional MR Using a Visual Vigilance ParadigmJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1996
- A Multidisciplinary Approach to Anterior Attentional FunctionsaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1995
- Event related potentials from closed head injury patients in an auditory "oddball" task: evidence of dysfunction in stimulus categorisation.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1988
- Frontal lesions and sustained attentionNeuropsychologia, 1987