Methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball P300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effect
Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) bimodal oddball task has disclosed increased sensitivity to show P300 modulations to subclinical symptoms. Even if the utility of such a procedure has still to be confirmed at a clinical level, gathering normative values of this new oddball variant may be of the great...
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doaj-cdc4ab96b72d4c37bf56929c694413ff2020-11-24T22:31:51ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-09-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01387181929Methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball P300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effectElisa Schroder0Hendrik Kajosch1Charles Kornreich2Paul Verbanck3Salvatore Campanella4ULBULBULBULBULBEvent-Related Potentials (ERPs) bimodal oddball task has disclosed increased sensitivity to show P300 modulations to subclinical symptoms. Even if the utility of such a procedure has still to be confirmed at a clinical level, gathering normative values of this new oddball variant may be of the greatest interest. We specifically addressed the challenge of defining the best location for the recording of P3a and P3b components and selecting the best reference to use by investigating the effect of an offline re-reference procedure on recorded bimodal P3a and P3b. Forty young and healthy subjects were submitted to a bimodal (synchronized and always congruent visual and auditory stimuli) three-stimulus oddball task in which 140 frequent bimodal stimuli, 30 deviant target stimuli and 30 distractors were presented. Task consisted in clicking as soon as possible on the targets, and not paying attention to frequent stimuli and distractors. This procedure allowed us to record, for each individual, the P3a component, referring to the novelty process related to distractors processing, and the P3b component, linked to the processing of the target stimuli. Results showed that both P3a and P3b showed maximal amplitude in Pz. However, P3a displayed a more central distribution. Nose reference was also shown to give maximal amplitudes compared with average and linked mastoids references. These data were discussed in light of the necessity to develop multi-site recording guidelines to furnish sets of ERPs data comparable across laboratories.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01387/fullEvent-related potentialsP3aReferenceP3btopographyBimodal P300 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Elisa Schroder Hendrik Kajosch Charles Kornreich Paul Verbanck Salvatore Campanella |
spellingShingle |
Elisa Schroder Hendrik Kajosch Charles Kornreich Paul Verbanck Salvatore Campanella Methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball P300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effect Frontiers in Psychology Event-related potentials P3a Reference P3b topography Bimodal P300 |
author_facet |
Elisa Schroder Hendrik Kajosch Charles Kornreich Paul Verbanck Salvatore Campanella |
author_sort |
Elisa Schroder |
title |
Methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball P300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effect |
title_short |
Methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball P300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effect |
title_full |
Methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball P300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effect |
title_fullStr |
Methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball P300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effect |
title_full_unstemmed |
Methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball P300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effect |
title_sort |
methodological considerations about the use of bimodal oddball p300 in psychiatry: topography and reference effect |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Psychology |
issn |
1664-1078 |
publishDate |
2016-09-01 |
description |
Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) bimodal oddball task has disclosed increased sensitivity to show P300 modulations to subclinical symptoms. Even if the utility of such a procedure has still to be confirmed at a clinical level, gathering normative values of this new oddball variant may be of the greatest interest. We specifically addressed the challenge of defining the best location for the recording of P3a and P3b components and selecting the best reference to use by investigating the effect of an offline re-reference procedure on recorded bimodal P3a and P3b. Forty young and healthy subjects were submitted to a bimodal (synchronized and always congruent visual and auditory stimuli) three-stimulus oddball task in which 140 frequent bimodal stimuli, 30 deviant target stimuli and 30 distractors were presented. Task consisted in clicking as soon as possible on the targets, and not paying attention to frequent stimuli and distractors. This procedure allowed us to record, for each individual, the P3a component, referring to the novelty process related to distractors processing, and the P3b component, linked to the processing of the target stimuli. Results showed that both P3a and P3b showed maximal amplitude in Pz. However, P3a displayed a more central distribution. Nose reference was also shown to give maximal amplitudes compared with average and linked mastoids references. These data were discussed in light of the necessity to develop multi-site recording guidelines to furnish sets of ERPs data comparable across laboratories. |
topic |
Event-related potentials P3a Reference P3b topography Bimodal P300 |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01387/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
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