EEG gamma-band activity in rapid serial visual presentation
EEG gamma-band activity in rapid serial visual presentation
Evidence is available that oscillatory activity in the gamma frequency range (>30 Hz) might be related to the attentional selection of target items. Rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) paradigms are instrumental in addressing cognitive functions such as visual attention, and they are increasingly combined with the measurement of electrical brain activity. In the present study, gamma-band responses for target and standard stimuli were investigated in an RSVP oddball paradigm. In a first study, stimuli were presented at a frequency of 10 Hz, the stimulus sequence consisted of rare colored letters (targets) and frequent black letters (standards). In addition, stimulus size was varied across experimental blocks. Significant target modulations were observed for the P3 ERP and induced (i.e., not phase-locked) gamma-band responses. Besides this late activation, no further gamma-band responses were observed. A second study aimed at replicating these findings by employing a reduced stimulus presentation rate of 7.1 Hz. Again, besides the P3 ERP a late increase in induced gamma-band activity was observed. However, as compared to Study 1, this induced response was less pronounced. The induced gamma-band response observed in the present studies might reflect utilization of information derived from previous processing steps for behavioral performance or memory storage as suggested in the ‘match-and-utilization-model’ of gamma activity.
evoked gamma-band activity, Induced gamma-band activity, RSVP, EEG, ERP, Match-and-utilization-model
246-254
Kranczioch, Cornelia
c5d9d3fb-2b54-4ae0-85dd-fb1ae11aea4f
Debener, Stefan
e6bf9143-09a8-45c0-8536-3564885375d4
Herrmann, Christoph S.
e3edc057-1857-4a1e-81f9-dc2dbd279cf7
Engel, Andreas K.
4c9e2742-c147-46d6-b750-bcab4b5baf34
2006
Kranczioch, Cornelia
c5d9d3fb-2b54-4ae0-85dd-fb1ae11aea4f
Debener, Stefan
e6bf9143-09a8-45c0-8536-3564885375d4
Herrmann, Christoph S.
e3edc057-1857-4a1e-81f9-dc2dbd279cf7
Engel, Andreas K.
4c9e2742-c147-46d6-b750-bcab4b5baf34
Kranczioch, Cornelia, Debener, Stefan, Herrmann, Christoph S. and Engel, Andreas K.
(2006)
EEG gamma-band activity in rapid serial visual presentation.
Experimental Brain Research, 169 (2), .
(doi:10.1007/s00221-005-0139-2).
Abstract
Evidence is available that oscillatory activity in the gamma frequency range (>30 Hz) might be related to the attentional selection of target items. Rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) paradigms are instrumental in addressing cognitive functions such as visual attention, and they are increasingly combined with the measurement of electrical brain activity. In the present study, gamma-band responses for target and standard stimuli were investigated in an RSVP oddball paradigm. In a first study, stimuli were presented at a frequency of 10 Hz, the stimulus sequence consisted of rare colored letters (targets) and frequent black letters (standards). In addition, stimulus size was varied across experimental blocks. Significant target modulations were observed for the P3 ERP and induced (i.e., not phase-locked) gamma-band responses. Besides this late activation, no further gamma-band responses were observed. A second study aimed at replicating these findings by employing a reduced stimulus presentation rate of 7.1 Hz. Again, besides the P3 ERP a late increase in induced gamma-band activity was observed. However, as compared to Study 1, this induced response was less pronounced. The induced gamma-band response observed in the present studies might reflect utilization of information derived from previous processing steps for behavioral performance or memory storage as suggested in the ‘match-and-utilization-model’ of gamma activity.
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Published date: 2006
Keywords:
evoked gamma-band activity, Induced gamma-band activity, RSVP, EEG, ERP, Match-and-utilization-model
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 27629
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27629
ISSN: 0014-4819
PURE UUID: 39fd0149-0a32-42bb-bc5f-8ed29dfc0c25
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Date deposited: 25 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:20
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Contributors
Author:
Cornelia Kranczioch
Author:
Stefan Debener
Author:
Christoph S. Herrmann
Author:
Andreas K. Engel
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