0000000000243568

AUTHOR

Urte Roeber

0000-0002-6631-5828

showing 4 related works from this author

Encoding into Visual Working Memory: Event-Related Brain Potentials Reflect Automatic Processing of Seemingly Redundant Information.

2013

Encoding and maintenance of information in visual working memory in an S1-S2 task with a 1500 ms retention phase were investigated by means of event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Participants were asked to decide whether two visual stimuli were physically identical (identity comparison (IC) task) or belonged to the same set or category of equivalent patterns (category comparison (CC) task). The stimuli differ with regard to two features. (1) Each pattern can belong to a set of either four (ESS 4) or eight (ESS 8) equivalent patterns, mirroring differences in the complexity with regard to the representational structure of each pattern (i.e., equivalence set size (ESS)). (2) The set of pat…

CommunicationVisual perceptionArticle SubjectWorking memoryComputer sciencebusiness.industryTask (project management)lcsh:RC321-571Encoding (memory)P3bbusinessSet (psychology)Equivalence (measure theory)lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryCognitive psychologyEvent (probability theory)Research ArticleNeuroscience journal
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Disentangling effects of auditory distraction and of stimulus-response sequence

2009

When we pay attention to one task, irrelevant changes may interfere. The effect of changes on behavioral and electrophysiological responses has been studied in two separate research fields: Research on Distraction states that a rare irrelevant change takes attention away from the primary task. Research on Sequences states that any change in stimulus or response incurs a cost or benefit depending on the kind of change. To disentangle distraction from sequence effects, we made task-irrelevant changes rare in one condition and frequent in another while also assessing stimulus and response changes from trial to trial. Participants used key presses to classify syllables presented in two differen…

MaleCognitive NeurosciencePoison controlExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulus (physiology)Electroencephalographybehavioral disciplines and activitiesAuditory distractionYoung AdultP3aStimulus–response modelDevelopmental NeuroscienceDistractionP3bReaction TimemedicineHumansAttentionskin and connective tissue diseasesEvoked PotentialsBiological Psychiatrymedicine.diagnostic_testEndocrine and Autonomic SystemsGeneral NeuroscienceElectroencephalographyhumanitiesNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyAcoustic StimulationNeurologySpeech PerceptionFemalesense organsPsychologySocial psychologyPsychomotor Performancepsychological phenomena and processesCognitive psychologyPsychophysiology
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Bottom-up influences on working memory: behavioral and electrophysiological distraction varies with distractor strength.

2004

Abstract. The present study investigates bottom-up effects serving the optimal balance between focusing attention on relevant information and distractibility by potentially significant events outside the focus of attention. We tested whether distraction, indicated by behavioral and event-related brain potential (ERP) measures, varies with the strength of task-irrelevant deviances. Twenty subjects performed a tone-duration discrimination task (200 or 400 ms sinusoidal tones presented equiprobably). The stimuli were presented with frequent standard (p = 0.84; 1000 Hz) or infrequent deviant (p = 0.16) pitch. These task-irrelevant pitch changes consisted in a frequency increase/decrease of 1%,…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentMismatch negativityExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAudiologyDevelopmental psychologyP3aArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)MemoryDistractionmedicineReaction TimeHumansAttentionEvoked PotentialsGeneral PsychologyWorking memoryBrainGeneral MedicineElectrophysiologyAuditory PerceptionFocusing attentionFemalePsychologyRelevant informationExperimental psychology
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Response repetition vs. response change modulates behavioral and electrophysiological effects of distraction

2004

If stimulation occasionally contains distracting information, behavioral responses to task-relevant aspects of the stimulation are prolonged and more error prone. Additionally, event-related potentials (ERPs) acquired in an auditory distraction paradigm show that the distracting information elicits the components mismatch negativity (MMN), P3a and reorienting negativity (RON). Here, we assess to what extent sequential dependencies in the stimulation influence such indicators of distraction. Data of four experiments were reanalyzed for response repetition and response change trials separately. Behavioral performance on Deviants suggests markedly smaller distraction effects in change compared…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationMismatch negativityExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulationAudiologybehavioral disciplines and activitiesDevelopmental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceP3aPerceptionDistractionReaction TimemedicineHumansmedia_commonAnalysis of VarianceRepetition (rhetorical device)CognitionhumanitiesElectrophysiologyElectrophysiologyAcoustic StimulationEvoked Potentials AuditoryFemalePsychologypsychological phenomena and processesCognitive Brain Research
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