Visual mismatch negativity (vMMN) for low- and high-level deviances: A control study

被引:0
|
作者
Domonkos File
Bálint File
Flóra Bodnár
István Sulykos
Krisztina Kecskés-Kovács
István Czigler
机构
[1] Eötvös Loránd University,Department of Cognitive Psychology
[2] Faculty of Education and Psychology,Doctoral School of Psychology
[3] Eötvös Loránd University,Research Centre of Natural Sciences, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Cognitive Psychology Group
[4] Hungarian Academy of Sciences,Faculty of Information Technology and Bionics
[5] Pazmany Peter Katolikus Egyetem,undefined
来源
关键词
Evoked potentials; Visual perception;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The aim of our studies was to separate the effects of violating a sequential rule (genuine visual mismatch negativity; gvMMN) from the decreased activity in response to repeated stimuli (stimulus-specific adaptation; SSA) for simple and more complex stimuli. To accomplish this goal, different control procedures were applied with the aim of finding the correct control for vMMN studies. Event-related brain electric activity (ERPs) was measured in response to nonattended visual stimuli that were presented either in an oddball manner or in various control sequences. To identify the cortical sources of the different processes, the sLORETA inverse solution was applied to the average ERP time series. In Experiment 1, the stimuli were line textures, and the deviancy was different line orientations. SSA fully explained the deviant-related ERP effects (increased posterior negativity in the 105–190 ms range). In Experiments 2 and 3, windmill patterns were used. Infrequent windmill patterns with 12 vanes elicited gvMMN (posterior negativities in the 100–200 and 200–340 ms ranges), whereas in the case of the less complex (six vanes) stimuli, SSA explained the negative deflection in both latency ranges (178–216 and 270–346 ms). In Experiment 3, infrequent stimuli with six vanes elicited deviant-related posterior negativity within the sequence of less complex (four vanes) frequent patterns. We reconcile the discrepant results by proposing that the underlying processes of vMMN are not uniform but depend strongly on the eliciting stimulus and that the complexity difference between the infrequent and frequent stimuli has considerable influence on the deviant-related response.
引用
收藏
页码:2153 / 2170
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Detecting object boundaries using low-, mid-, and high-level information
    Zheng, Songfeng
    Tu, Zhuowen
    Yuille, Alan L.
    2007 IEEE CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER VISION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION, VOLS 1-8, 2007, : 2652 - +
  • [42] Metacognitive Accuracy Improves With the Perceptual Learning of a Low- but Not High-Level Face Property
    Chen, Benjamin
    Mundy, Matthew
    Tsuchiya, Naotsugu
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 10
  • [43] The Immediate and Delayed Effects of Acute Exercise on Low- and High-level Processing Tasks
    Lambourne, Kate
    Lyall, Jamie L.
    Tomporowski, Phillip D.
    Audiffren, Michel
    MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2008, 40 (05): : S90 - S90
  • [44] The effects of the use of captions on low- and high-level EFL learners' speaking performance
    Kim, Na-Young
    LINGUISTIC RESEARCH, 2020, 37 : 135 - 161
  • [45] Acute Ethanol Effects on Brain Activation in Low- and High-Level Responders to Alcohol
    Trim, Ryan S.
    Simmons, Alan N.
    Tolentino, Neil J.
    Hall, Shana A.
    Matthews, Scott C.
    Robinson, Shannon K.
    Smith, Tom L.
    Padula, Claudia B.
    Paulus, Martin P.
    Tapert, Susan F.
    Schuckit, Marc A.
    ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2010, 34 (07) : 1162 - 1170
  • [46] Detecting object boundaries using low-, mid-, and high-level information
    Zheng, Songfeng
    Yuille, Alan
    Tu, Zhuowen
    COMPUTER VISION AND IMAGE UNDERSTANDING, 2010, 114 (10) : 1055 - 1067
  • [47] Interpretive criteria to differentiate low- and high-level mupirocin resistance in Staphylococcus aureus
    Moreira de Oliveira, Naira Elane
    Couto Marques Cardozo, Ana Paula
    de Andrade Marques, Elizabeth
    Netto dos Santos, Katia Regina
    Giambiagi-deMarval, Marcia
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2007, 56 (07) : 937 - 939
  • [48] The geometry of high-level visual representations
    Kriegeskorte, Nikolaus
    I-PERCEPTION, 2014, 5 (04): : 412 - 412
  • [49] High-level properties and visual experience
    William Fish
    Philosophical Studies, 2013, 162 : 43 - 55
  • [50] High-level properties and visual experience
    Fish, William
    PHILOSOPHICAL STUDIES, 2013, 162 (01) : 43 - 55