Hl. Lew et al., Comparison of speech-evoked v tone-evoked P300 response - Implications forpredicting outcomes in patients with traumatic brain injury, AM J PHYS M, 78(4), 1999, pp. 367-371
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Ortopedics, Rehabilitation & Sport Medicine
Journal title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE & REHABILITATION
The P300 response is a cognitive event-related potential recorded over the
scalp. The tone-evoked P300 response has been used to predict outcomes of p
atients with brain injury. However, it may lead to false predictions becaus
e some normal people have a very small tone-evoked P300 response. It is hyp
othesized that speech may generate a more robust P300 response than tones.
A voice-generator prototype was designed for this study. The rare speech si
gnal was the word "mommy" in a female voice. The common signal was a 1000-H
z tone. Twenty-two normal adults (11 males, 11 females; age range, 18-60 yr
) were tested for both speech-evoked and tone-evoked P300 responses. Speech
-evoked P300 responses had significantly larger amplitudes (mean, 12.1 mu V
) than the tone-evoked responses (mean, 5.9 mu V P < 0.0001). Six subjects
with brain injury were also tested using the same protocol: two subjects wi
th severe brain injury showed no response to either stimulus. Both died wit
hin 1 wk after the testing. Although two subjects with moderate brain injur
y could not complete the testing because of agitated behavior, two other su
bjects with mild traumatic brain injury showed a larger speech-evoked than
tone-evoked P300 response. The speech-evoked P300 response may be promising
in predicting outcomes of patients with brain injury.