Search results for "ERPs"

showing 10 items of 28 documents

Auditory event-related potentials over medial frontal electrodes express both negative and positive prediction errors

2015

International audience; While the neuronal activation in the medial frontal cortex is thought to reflect higher-order evaluation processes of reward prediction errors when a reward deviates from our expectation, there is increasing evidence that the medial frontal activity might express prediction errors in general. However, given that several studies examined the medial frontal event-related potentials (ERPs) by comparing signals triggered by different stimuli and different anticipations, it remains an open question whether the medial frontal signals are sensitive to the valence of prediction errors. Here we orthogonally manipulated expectation magnitude (i.e., large/small expectation) and…

AdultMaleAuditory eventbehavioral disciplines and activitiesRewardHumansValence (psychology)Electroencephalography (EEG)Electrodesta515General Neuroscience[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/NeuroscienceElectroencephalographyMedial frontal cortexNeuronal activationFrontal LobeFacial ExpressionNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyFaceEvoked Potentials AuditoryFemalePrediction errorsPsychologyNeuroscienceMedial frontal event-related potentials (ERPs)Photic StimulationPsychomotor PerformanceCognitive psychologyBiological Psychology
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Role of sensorimotor areas in early detection of motor errors: An EEG and TMS study

2019

Abstract Action execution is prone to errors and, while engaged in interaction, our brain is tuned to detect deviations from what one expects from other’s action. Prior research has shown that Event-Related-Potentials (ERPs) are specifically modulated by the observation of action mistakes interfering with goal achievement. However, in complex and modular actions, embedded motor errors do not necessarily produce an immediate effect on the global goal. Here we dissociate embedded motor goals from global action goals by asking subjects to observe familiar but untrained knotting actions. During knotting an embedded motor error (i.e. the rope is inserted top-down instead of bottom-up during the …

AdultMaleComputer sciencemedicine.medical_treatmentMotor errorSocio-culturaleEarly detectionMotor ActivityElectroencephalographyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumansGoal achievementEvoked Potentials030304 developmental biologyAction processing; Early negativity; ERPs; Observation of motor errors; TMS0303 health sciencesmedicine.diagnostic_testElectroencephalographyObserver (special relativity)ERPsAnticipation PsychologicalTranscranial Magnetic StimulationObservation of motor errorsSensorimotor AreasTranscranial magnetic stimulationEarly negativityTMSAction planAction processingVisual PerceptionFemaleSensorimotor CortexCuesGoalsPsychomotor Performance030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyBehavioural Brain Research
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Animacy-based predictions in language comprehension are robust: contextual cues modulate but do not nullify them

2015

Couldn't a humble coconut hurt a gardener? At least in the first instance, the brain seems to assume that it should not: we perceive inanimate entities such as coconuts as poor event instigators ("Actors"). Ideally, entities causing a change in another entity should be animate and this assumption not only influences event perception but also carries over to language comprehension. We present three auditory event-related brain potential (ERP) studies on the processing of inanimate and animate subjects and objects in simple transitive sentences in Tamil. ERP responses were measured at the second argument (event participant) in all three studies. Experiment 1 employed all possible animacy comb…

AdultMaleTamilTime Factorsanimacypredictive processingContext (language use)VocabularySentence processingJudgmentYoung AdultArgumentSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansEvoked PotentialsMolecular BiologyLanguageEvent (probability theory)Analysis of VarianceTransitive relationCommunicationbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceBrainElectroencephalographysentence processingcontextual cuesERPslanguage.human_languageComprehensionAcoustic StimulationTamillanguageFemaleNeurology (clinical)CuesComprehensionAnimacyPsychologybusinessDevelopmental BiologyCognitive psychologyactor
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Both attention and prediction are necessary for adaptive neuronal tuning in sensory processing

2014

International audience; The brain as a proactive system processes sensory information under the top-down influence of attention and prediction. However, the relation between attention and prediction remains undetermined given the conflation of these two mechanisms in the literature. To evaluate whether attention and prediction are dependent of each other, and if so, how these two top-down mechanisms may interact in sensory processing, we orthogonally manipulated attention and prediction in a target detection task. Participants were instructed to pay attention to one of two interleaved stimulus streams of predictable/unpredictable tone frequency. We found that attention and prediction intera…

Auditory areaSensory systemElectroencephalographyStimulus (physiology)event-related potentials050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience[SCCO]Cognitive science0302 clinical medicineEvent-related potentialNeuronal tuningmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesOriginal Research ArticleElectroencephalography (EEG)tarkkaavaisuussensory processinglcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryDipole sourceBiological Psychiatryta515medicine.diagnostic_test[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience05 social sciencesCorrectionpredictionConflationattentionPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeurologyevent-related potentials (ERPs)PsychologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryelectroencephalographyNeuroscienceFrontiers in human neuroscience
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The Role of Social Media in Societal Change : Cases in Finland of Fifth Estate Activity on Facebook

2015

The Internet can be used to reconfigure access to information and people in ways that can support networked individuals and enhance their relative communicative power vis-à-vis other individuals and institutions, such as by supporting collective action, sourcing of information, and whistle blowing. The societal and political significance of the Internet is a matter of academic debate, with some studies suggesting a powerful role in creating a “Fifth Estate,” and other studies challenging such claims. Research on this issue has not yet comprehensively focused on social network sites and those operating in a very liberal-democratic context. Based on an embedded case study of Facebook use in …

Cultural StudiesFacebookCyberpsychologysocial mediasosiaalinen medialcsh:Communication. Mass mediaPower (social and political)ta616Social mediaSociologyta518Fifth EstateFifth EstateSocial movementbusiness.industryCommunicationSocial changePublic relationslcsh:P87-96social movementComputer Science Applicationscommunicative powerAccess to informationThe InternetbusinessSocial psychology
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Issues of Ethics and Methods in Studying Social Media

2016

The Editorial raises some challenging ethical and methodological aspects of Internet based research (such as protection of informational privacy, informed consent, general ethical guidelines vs case-based approach), which are further discussed in the five articles of this special issue.

FacebookComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSIONCyberpsychologyCommunicationsocial media05 social sciencesComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING050905 science studiesethicslcsh:P87-96lcsh:Communication. Mass mediaInformed consentInternet basedInternet based researchInformation ethics0502 economics and businessComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDSOCIETYparticipationEngineering ethicsSocial mediaSociology0509 other social sciencesSociology of the InternetSocial psychology050212 sport leisure & tourismMedia and Communication
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The time course of processing handwritten words: An ERP investigation

2021

Available online 25 June 2021. Behavioral studies have shown that the legibility of handwritten script hinders visual word recognition. Furthermore, when compared with printed words, lexical effects (e.g., word-frequency effect) are magnified for less intelligible (difficult) handwriting (Barnhart and Goldinger, 2010; Perea et al., 2016). This boost has been interpreted in terms of greater influence of top-down mechanisms during visual word recognition. In the present experiment, we registered the participants’ ERPs to uncover top-down processing effects on early perceptual encoding. Participants’ behavioral and EEG responses were recorded to high- and low-frequency words that varied in scr…

HandwritingCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectSpeech recognitionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyLegibility050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineHandwritingPerceptionEncoding (memory)Lexical decision taskHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEvoked Potentialsmedia_commonVisual word recognitionVisual word processing05 social sciencesERPsComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITIONPattern Recognition VisualReadingTime courseComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSINGVisual PerceptionHandwritten word processingVisual word recognitionPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Electrophysiological correlates of strategic monitoring in event-based and time-based prospective memory

2012

Prospective memory (PM) is the ability to remember to accomplish an action when a particular event occurs (i.e., event-based PM), or at a specific time (i.e., time-based PM) while performing an ongoing activity. Strategic Monitoring is one of the basic cognitive functions supporting PM tasks, and involves two mechanisms: a retrieval mode, which consists of maintaining active the intention in memory; and target checking, engaged for verifying the presence of the PM cue in the environment. The present study is aimed at providing the first evidence of event-related potentials (ERPs) associated with time-based PM, and at examining differences and commonalities in the ERPs related to Strategic M…

MaleAnatomy and PhysiologyTime FactorsEvent (relativity)lcsh:MedicineElectroencephalographyTask Performance and AnalysiSocial and Behavioral SciencesTask (project management)CognitionProspective memoryTask Performance and AnalysisPsychologyPrefrontal cortexlcsh:ScienceEvoked PotentialsClinical NeurophysiologyMultidisciplinarymedicine.diagnostic_testMedicine (all)CognitionElectroencephalographyPROSPECTIVE MEMORY; STRATEGIC MONITORING; ERPsMental HealthMedicineFemaleEvoked PotentialCognitive psychologyResearch ArticleHumanAdultTime FactorCognitive NeuroscienceMemory EpisodicBiologyYoung AdultEvent-related potentialDiagnostic MedicinemedicineReaction TimeHumansSensory cueBiologyBehaviorBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)Settore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia Fisiologicalcsh:RCognitive PsychologySTRATEGIC MONITORINGERPsAgricultural and Biological Sciences (all)PROSPECTIVE MEMORYlcsh:QNeuroscience
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Change detection to tone pairs during the first year of life – Predictive longitudinal relationships for EEG-based source and time-frequency measures

2019

Abstract Brain responses related to auditory processing show large changes throughout infancy and childhood with some evidence that the two hemispheres might mature at different rates. Differing rates of hemispheric maturation could be linked to the proposed functional specialization of the hemispheres in which the left auditory cortex engages in analysis of precise timing information whereas the right auditory cortex focuses on analysis of sound frequency. Here the auditory change detection process for rapidly presented tone-pairs was examined in a longitudinal sample of infants at the age of 6 and 12 months using EEG. The ERP response related to change detection of a frequency contrast, i…

MaleAuditory PathwaysElectroencephalographyAudiologyFunctional LateralityChild Development0302 clinical medicineContrast (vision)Longitudinal StudiesEEGta515auditory processingmedia_commonmedicine.diagnostic_testinfants05 social sciencesFunctional specializationElectroencephalographykuulomedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyAuditory PerceptionEvoked Potentials AuditoryFemaleChange detectionmedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectAuditory areaBiologyAuditory cortexta3112050105 experimental psychologyLateralization of brain function03 medical and health sciencesmedicineHumansAuditory system0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesdevelopmentAuditory CortextaajuusInfantspectral powerERPsAcoustic Stimulationkuulontutkimusääni (fysikaaliset ilmiöt)sense organsphase-locking030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroImage
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An investigation of Facebook users' implicit associations between Facebook, sexual and prosocial behavior.

2018

Abstract Despite growing research on online social networking, implicit associations of Facebook users have been largely understudied. In Study 1, we used the Single-Target Implicit Association Test (ST-IAT; Karpinski and Steinman, 2006) in order to assess implicit associations between Facebook and two evolutionary relevant constructs: sexual and prosocial behavior. Additionally, we controlled for the role of participant's relationship status as a potential moderator of Facebook implicit associations. In Study 2, we extended these findings and explored the relationship between implicit and explicit associations towards Facebook. Across two studies, we found that Facebook is more strongly as…

Multidisciplinarygenetic structuresCyberpsychologyeducation05 social sciencesImplicit-association test050801 communication & media studies050109 social psychologyModeration0508 media and communicationsProsocial behaviorSexual behaviorOrder (business)Psychologylcsh:H1-990501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:Social sciences (General)lcsh:Science (General)PsychologySocial psychologypsychological phenomena and processeslcsh:Q1-390Heliyon
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