Search results for "MISMATCH NEGATIVITY"

showing 2 items of 182 documents

Explicit behavioral detection of visual changes develops without their implicit neurophysiological detectability

2011

Change blindness is a failure of reporting major changes across consecutive images if separated, e.g., by a brief blank interval. Successful change detection across interrupts requires focal attention to the changes. However, findings of implicit detection of visual changes during change blindness have raised the question of whether the implicit mode is necessary for development of the explicit mode. To this end, we recorded the visual mismatch negativity (vMMN) of the event-related potentials (ERPs) of the brain, an index of implicit pre-attentive visual change detection, in adult humans performing an oddball-variant of change blindness flicker task. Images of 500 ms in duration were prese…

visual mismatch negativitygenetic structuresflicker paradigmMismatch negativityStimulus (physiology)Electroencephalographyevent-related potentialsBlanklcsh:RC321-571Developmental psychologyBehavioral NeuroscienceEvent-related potentialInter-stimulus intervalmedicineOriginal Research Articleskin and connective tissue diseaseslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOddball paradigmta515Biological Psychiatrychange blindnessmedicine.diagnostic_testPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeurologyChange blindnesssense organsPsychologyChange detectionNeuroscienceoddball paradigmCognitive psychologyFrontiers in Human Neuroscience
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Long-term physical activity modifies automatic visual processing

2019

Electrophysiologically registered visual mismatch negativity (vMMN) is known to represent automatic visual processing in human visual cortex. Since physical activity (PA) is generally beneficial to cerebrovascular function, we wanted to find out if automatic visual processing is affected by PA. We investigated the connection between long-term leisure-time PA and precognitive visual processing in 32 healthy young males. Participants were divided into active (n = 16) and inactive (n = 16) group according to their leisure-time PA records from the past three years. vMMN was recorded with electroencephalogram using passive oddball paradigm with visual bars. Standard (90%) and deviant (10%) stimu…

visual mismatch negativitygenetic structuresphysical exercisedistractibilityhealthy young malesliikuntakognitiiviset prosessittarkkaavaisuuspoikkeavuusnegatiivisuusnäköfyysinen aktiivisuus
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