↓ Skip to main content

Phase noise reveals early category-specific modulation of the event-related potentials

Overview of attention for article published in Frontiers in Psychology, April 2014
Altmetric Badge

Citations

dimensions_citation
9 Dimensions

Readers on

mendeley
28 Mendeley
You are seeing a free-to-access but limited selection of the activity Altmetric has collected about this research output. Click here to find out more.
Title
Phase noise reveals early category-specific modulation of the event-related potentials
Published in
Frontiers in Psychology, April 2014
DOI 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00367
Pubmed ID
Authors

Kornél Németh, Petra Kovács, Pál Vakli, Gyula Kovács, Márta Zimmer

Abstract

Previous studies have found that the amplitude of the early event-related potential (ERP) components evoked by faces, such as N170 and P2, changes systematically as a function of noise added to the stimuli. This change has been linked to an increased perceptual processing demand and to enhanced difficulty in perceptual decision making about faces. However, to date it has not yet been tested whether noise manipulation affects the neural correlates of decisions about face and non-face stimuli similarly. To this end, we measured the ERPs for faces and cars at three different phase noise levels. Subjects performed the same two-alternative age-discrimination task on stimuli chosen from young-old morphing continua that were created from faces as well as cars and were calibrated to lead to similar performances at each noise-level. Adding phase noise to the stimuli reduced performance and enhanced response latency for the two categories to the same extent. Parallel to that, phase noise reduced the amplitude and prolonged the latency of the face-specific N170 component. The amplitude of the P1 showed category-specific noise dependence: it was enhanced over the right hemisphere for cars and over the left hemisphere for faces as a result of adding phase noise to the stimuli, but remained stable across noise levels for cars over the left and for faces over the right hemisphere. Moreover, noise modulation altered the category-selectivity of the N170, while the P2 ERP component, typically associated with task decision difficulty, was larger for the more noisy stimuli regardless of stimulus category. Our results suggest that the category-specificity of noise-induced modulations of ERP responses starts at around 100 ms post-stimulus.

Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 28 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Hungary 1 4%
Germany 1 4%
Unknown 26 93%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Master 6 21%
Student > Ph. D. Student 6 21%
Researcher 5 18%
Student > Bachelor 3 11%
Professor 2 7%
Other 3 11%
Unknown 3 11%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Psychology 18 64%
Business, Management and Accounting 2 7%
Medicine and Dentistry 2 7%
Neuroscience 2 7%
Engineering 1 4%
Other 0 0%
Unknown 3 11%