Publication information

Bibliographic entry:

Datta A, Cusack R, Hawkins K, Heutink J, Rorden C, Robertson IH, Manly T (2007) “The p300 as a marker of waning attention and error propensity.” Comput Intell Neurosci :93968

Abstract:

Action errors can occur when routine responses are triggered inappropriately by familiar cues. Here, EEG was recorded as volunteers performed a "go/no-go" task of long duration that occasionally and unexpectedly required them to withhold a frequent, routine response. EEG components locked to the onset of relevant go trials were sorted according to whether participants erroneously responded to immediately subsequent no-go trials or correctly withheld their responses. Errors were associated with a significant relative reduction in the amplitude of the preceding P300, that is, a judgement could be made bout whether a response-inhibition error was likely before it had actually occurred. Furthermore, fluctuations in P300 amplitude across the task formed a reliable associate of individual error propensity, supporting its use as a marker of sustained control over action.

Online links:Available online from Hindawi Publishing Corporation
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Publication type:Journal Article
Publication status:In print
Publication date:2007
Languages:English
DOI:10.1155/2007/93968
ISSN:1687-5265
ESSN:1687-5273
Record status:PubMed