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Selective attention and the auditory vertex potential. I - Effects of stimulus delivery rate. II - Effects of signal intensity and masking noiseThe effects of varying the rate of delivery of dichotic tone pip stimuli on selective attention measured by evoked-potential amplitudes and signal detectability scores were studied. The subjects attended to one channel (ear) of tones, ignored the other, and pressed a button whenever occasional targets - tones of a slightly higher pitch were detected in the attended ear. Under separate conditions, randomized interstimulus intervals were short, medium, and long. Another study compared the effects of attention on the N1 component of the auditory evoked potential for tone pips presented alone and when white noise was added to make the tones barely above detectability threshold in a three-channel listening task. Major conclusions are that (1) N1 is enlarged to stimuli in an attended channel only in the short interstimulus interval condition (averaging 350 msec), (2) N1 and P3 are related to different modes of selective attention, and (3) attention selectivity in multichannel listening task is greater when tones are faint and/or difficult to detect.
Document ID
19760049907
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Schwent, V. L.
(California Univ. La Jolla, CA, United States)
Hillyard, S. A.
(California Univ. La Jolla, CA, United States)
Galambos, R.
(California, University La Jolla, Calif., United States)
Date Acquired
August 8, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1976
Publication Information
Publication: Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology
Volume: 40
Subject Category
Behavioral Sciences
Accession Number
76A32873
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NGR-05-009-198
CONTRACT_GRANT: NIH-MH-25544-01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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