Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in 19 healthy subjects as they completed two Sternberg (1969, American Scientist, 57, 421-457) memory tests. In separate sessions, either single digits (i.e., 0-9) or 10 abstract figures were used as stimuli. In both sessions, memory set sizes were 1 (M1), 2 (M2), or 4 (M4). The amplitude and latency of the parietal P400 and the frontocentral negativity preceding P400 varied significantly with set size, but only between M1 and M2, whereas reaction time increased dramatically from M1 to M2 and from M2 to M4. These findings challenge previous assertions that the ERPs reflect aspects of the exhaustive serial search proposed by Sternberg. A late parietal positivity (P620), which failed to vary with set size, was larger in response to figures than to digits and may represent the search for, or utilization of, semantic traces of the stimuli.
18 healthy subjects had to guess, which of two nonequiprobable events would occur next. Each trial was preceded by a cue which increased the probability of the corresponding event as compared to its global probability. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded and then classified according to global probability of events, their relation to the preceeding cue (valid versus invalid cues) and to subject's prediction (predicted versus nonpredicted). Two late positive waves (P350 and P550) with parietal maxima were distinguished. Both waves had larger amplitudes in response to improbable events than to highly-probably events. Similarly, both had larger amplitudes following invalid cues than following valid cues, and this difference was larger in those subjects who tended to follow the cue than in those who tended to reject it. No difference in terms of ERP component amplitudes was found between predicted and unpredicted events; however, the latency of the P350 peak was longer following unpredicted events. Taken together with data of the literature, the present results indicate that ERP allow us to distinguish between two meanings of the word "expectancy": (1) the rule-related expectancy as cognitive estimation of the likelihood or "representativeness" of an event (based on grasping event contingencies), and (2) the goal-related expectancy manifested in the subject's overt behavior. Only the former "expectancy" affects the amplitude of the late positive wave ("P3"), while the latter does not.
Disturbances of the topographical distribution of theta activity in the EEG spectra before and during voluntary movements were investigated in 31 neuroleptic-treated and in 13 untreated schizophrenics and matched controls as well as in 15 normals medicated with haloperidol. All 4 groups demonstrated similar topographical distribution of theta mean power density, with highest values over the midfrontal region. In the center frequency of the theta band, however, treated and untreated schizophrenics had lower values over the midfrontal region than at parietal electrodes. In controls and normals medicated with haloperidol, this frontoparietal "gradient" demonstrated the inverse picture, with highest values at the frontal midline electrode. Patients and controls differed significantly in this gradient. The slower theta activity over the midfrontal cortex in the schizophrenic patients is related to the hypofrontality hypothesis.
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