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The p300 as a marker of waning attention and error propensity.


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Type

Article

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Authors

Datta, Avijit 
Cusack, Rhodri 
Hawkins, Kari 
Heutink, Joost 
Rorden, Chris 

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.

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Keywords

1701 Psychology, Clinical, Clinical Medicine and Science, Behavioral and Social Science

Journal Title

Comput Intell Neurosci

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1687-5265
1687-5273

Volume Title

Publisher

Hindawi Limited
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_U105559837)