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This study investigated the relationship between the pattern-specific event-related potential (ERP) components (C1, C2, C3) and the component specific to automatic change detection in the visual modality (visual mismatch response, vMMR) and the influence of stimulus placement on the latter. These insights would help to understand whether the emergence of vMMR is due to the modulation of exogenous activity or a specific deviant-related activity and advance the methodology of investigating vMMR. In two experiments, we presented checkerboard patterns in passive oddball sequences consisting of frequent (standard) and rare (deviant) events to examine vMMR as a function of the stimulated half-fields. In Experiment 1, the lower and upper half-field stimuli were presented within the same sequences, whereas in Experiment 2, they were presented in different sequences, completed with whole-field stimulation. As expected, we observed polarity reversal of the C1 and C2 components as a function of the stimulated half-field. Deviant stimuli elicited negative vMMR during lower and whole-field stimulation, but upper half-field stimulation evoked no significant vMMR. At lower half-field stimulation, the C2 component was larger to deviant stimuli, indicating the contribution of exogenous components to the deviant-standard difference. The sLORETA calculations showed that similar sources, including the primary visual cortex and other visual areas, were active during all exogenous and deviant-related components. Altogether, these results demonstrate the relationship between the pattern-specific and vMMR components and the more dominant influence of lower half-field stimulation in the recorded brain activity during automatic change detection.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/psyp.70111 | DOI Listing |
Psychophysiology
July 2025
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Hungarian Research Network, Budapest, Hungary.
This study investigated the relationship between the pattern-specific event-related potential (ERP) components (C1, C2, C3) and the component specific to automatic change detection in the visual modality (visual mismatch response, vMMR) and the influence of stimulus placement on the latter. These insights would help to understand whether the emergence of vMMR is due to the modulation of exogenous activity or a specific deviant-related activity and advance the methodology of investigating vMMR. In two experiments, we presented checkerboard patterns in passive oddball sequences consisting of frequent (standard) and rare (deviant) events to examine vMMR as a function of the stimulated half-fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Sports Act Living
April 2025
Department of Movement and Sports Sciences, Ghent University, Gent, Belgium.
Introduction: Literature on the effect of task and environment manipulation with the purpose of stimulating creative actions in futsal is promising yet limited. The aim of this study was to compare the effect of task and environmental manipulation on individual creativity development of futsal players.
Methods: To conduct this study, 40 male players of the university futsal teams (M = 23.
Doc Ophthalmol
April 2025
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Aim: To describe methods of evaluating multichannel full and half field pattern VEPs using the ISCEV VEP Standard montage.
Methods: The dependence of full field and half field pattern VEPs on retinal areas and cortical generators is reviewed and applied to the interpretation and evaluation of multichannel half field pattern VEPs.
Results: There are predictable differences in the trans-occipital distributions of components of monocular full, and half field, pattern-reversal and full field, onset-offset VEPs.
J Vis
March 2025
Clinical Neuropsychology, Department of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Munich, Germany.
The perception of ambiguous stimuli, notably binocular rivalry (BR), has been demonstrated to be influenced by spatial context. Previous results are, however, inconsistent with regard to whether the context biases perception toward the BR target that matches the context or toward the one that differs from the context. Furthermore, it is unclear what roles the perceptual ambiguity of the context and its lateral location play.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaterality
May 2024
Department of Clinical, Educational & Health Psychology, Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London, London, UK.
Despite wide reporting of a right ear (RE) advantage on dichotic listening tasks and a right visual field (RVF) advantage on visual half-field tasks, we know very little about the relationship between these perceptual biases. Previous studies that have investigated perceptual asymmetries for analogous auditory and visual consonant-vowel tasks have indicated a serendipitous finding: a RE advantage and a left visual field (LVF) advantage with poor cross-modal correlations. In this study, we examined the possibility that this LVF advantage for visual processing of consonant-vowel strings may be a consequence of repetition by examining perceptual biases in analogous auditory and visual tasks for both consonant-vowel strings and words.
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