| Literature DB >> 10599853 |
R Kilpeläinen1, L Luoma, E Herrgård, H Yppärilä, J Partanen, J Karhu.
Abstract
The P300 event-related potential (ERP) was studied at the beginning, in the middle, and at the end of an auditory stimulus discrimination task in 70 normal 9-year-old children. Easily distractible children showed frontally a short-latency P300 response to target stimuli throughout the task, whereas in the non-distractible children the corresponding response was distinctly smaller and also showed a tendency to decrease in size towards the end of the task. The short-latency frontal P300 response reflects activation of the brain's orienting networks, and it normally decreases in size when stimuli lose their 'novelty value' with stimulus repetition. Persistent frontal P300 suggest that distractible children continued to show enhanced orienting to stimuli that should have already been well encoded and/or categorized.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10599853 DOI: 10.1097/00001756-199911080-00027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroreport ISSN: 0959-4965 Impact factor: 1.837