Ym. Cycowicz et D. Friedman, EFFECT OF SOUND FAMILIARITY ON THE EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS ELICITED BY NOVEL ENVIRONMENTAL SOUNDS, Brain and cognition, 36(1), 1998, pp. 30-51
The effect of sound familiarity was examined within the context of an
event-related potential (ERP) novelty oddball paradigm. Brain electric
al activity was recorded while subjects (16 young adults) listened to
frequent tones, infrequent target tones, and infrequent novel environm
ental sounds. Subjects were instructed to press a button in response t
o the target tones only. There were 48 different novel sounds, 32 of w
hich were repeated, and about two-thirds of which represented familiar
sound concepts. The novel sounds elicited two ERP components, the nov
elty P3 and the P3(2). The novelty P3 was modulated by both repetition
and familiarity, such that repeated familiar sounds elicited decrease
d novelty P3 amplitude at frontal sites, while repeated unfamiliar sou
nds elicited increased novelty P3 amplitude at posterior sites. This d
ifferential effect may reflect the operation of a neural network that
distinguishes among different degrees of novelty. (C) 1998 Academic Pr
ess.