PMID: 8961790Nov 1, 1996Paper

An ERP developmental study of repetition priming by auditory novel stimuli

Psychophysiology
Yael M CycowiczM Rothstein

Abstract

Event-related potentials were recorded from participants 5-7, 9-11, 14-16, and 22-28 years old during an auditory novelty oddball task. In this task, stimuli about which the participant is not instructed (i.e., novel or uncategorized) typically elicit a more frontally oriented P3 scalp topography (novelty P3). In contrast, stimuli to which the participant must respond (i.e., target or precategorized) elicit a P3 with a more posterior scalp topography. Repetition of identical novel stimuli led to a similar reduction in novelty P3 amplitude for all age groups. Moreover, with repetition the shift in scalp topography of the novelty P3 to a more parietally oriented distribution was similar in children and adults. A second component, the P3(2) (assumed to be an analog of the P3b), exhibited a repetition priming effect in both the adults and the youngest children. The fact that age-related differences induced by novel repetition were small and not systematic indicates that the processing of novel information is similar across a wide age range.

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Citations

May 12, 2004·Clinical Neurophysiology : Official Journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology·Yael M Cycowicz, David Friedman
Dec 9, 2003·Brain Research. Cognitive Brain Research·David FriedmanIsabel Dziobek
Aug 1, 1997·Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology·Y M Cycowicz, D Friedman
Jul 11, 2001·Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews·D FriedmanH Gaeta
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Oct 18, 2000·Biological Psychology·Y M Cycowicz
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Apr 3, 2012·BMC Infectious Diseases·Michael KiharaCharles R J C Newton
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Nov 17, 2009·Brain and Cognition·Sidney J SegalowitzMichelle K Jetha
Jun 11, 2008·International Journal of Psychophysiology : Official Journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology·Marjo J R Brinkman, Johannes E A Stauder
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Jun 15, 2013·Psychophysiology·Nicole WetzelAndreas Widmann
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Dec 5, 2012·Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews·Brandon KeehnJeanne Townsend
Mar 1, 2014·PsyCh Journal·Nicole Wetzel, Erich Schröger

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