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EEG-Response Consistency across Subjects in an Active Oddball Task

The active oddball paradigm is a candidate task for voluntary brain activation. Previous research has focused on group effects, and has largely overlooked the potential problem of interindividual differences. Interindividual variance causes problems with the interpretation of group-level results. In...

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Autores principales: Höller, Yvonne, Thomschewski, Aljoscha, Bergmann, Jürgen, Kronbichler, Martin, Crone, Julia S., Schmid, Elisabeth V., Butz, Kevin, Höller, Peter, Trinka, Eugen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3779217/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24073216
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074572
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author Höller, Yvonne
Thomschewski, Aljoscha
Bergmann, Jürgen
Kronbichler, Martin
Crone, Julia S.
Schmid, Elisabeth V.
Butz, Kevin
Höller, Peter
Trinka, Eugen
author_facet Höller, Yvonne
Thomschewski, Aljoscha
Bergmann, Jürgen
Kronbichler, Martin
Crone, Julia S.
Schmid, Elisabeth V.
Butz, Kevin
Höller, Peter
Trinka, Eugen
author_sort Höller, Yvonne
collection PubMed
description The active oddball paradigm is a candidate task for voluntary brain activation. Previous research has focused on group effects, and has largely overlooked the potential problem of interindividual differences. Interindividual variance causes problems with the interpretation of group-level results. In this study we want to demonstrate the degree of consistency in the active oddball task across subjects, in order to answer the question of whether this task is able to reliably detect conscious target processing in unresponsive patients. We asked 18 subjects to count rare targets and to ignore frequent standards and rare distractors in an auditory active oddball task. Event-related-potentials (ERPs) and time-frequency data were analyzed with permutation-t-tests on a single subject level. We plotted the group-average ERPs and time-frequency data, and evaluated the numbers of subjects showing significant differences between targets and distractors in certain time-ranges. The distinction between targets/distractors and standards was found to be significant in the time-range of the P300 in all participants. In contrast, significant differences between targets and distractors in the time-range of the P3a/b were found in 8 subjects, only. By including effects in the N1 and in a late negative component there remained 2 subjects who did not show a distinction between targets and distractors in the ERP. While time-frequency data showed prominent effects for target/distractor vs. standard, significant differences between targets and distractors were found in 2 subjects, only. The results suggest that time-frequency- and ERP-analysis of the active oddball task may not be sensitive enough to detect voluntary brain activation in unresponsive patients. In addition, we found that time-frequency analysis was even less informative than ERPs about the subject’s task performance. Despite suggesting the use of more sensitive paradigms and/or analysis techniques, the present results give further evidence that electroencephalographic research should rely more strongly on single-subject analysis because interpretations of group-effects may be misleading.
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spelling pubmed-37792172013-09-26 EEG-Response Consistency across Subjects in an Active Oddball Task Höller, Yvonne Thomschewski, Aljoscha Bergmann, Jürgen Kronbichler, Martin Crone, Julia S. Schmid, Elisabeth V. Butz, Kevin Höller, Peter Trinka, Eugen PLoS One Research Article The active oddball paradigm is a candidate task for voluntary brain activation. Previous research has focused on group effects, and has largely overlooked the potential problem of interindividual differences. Interindividual variance causes problems with the interpretation of group-level results. In this study we want to demonstrate the degree of consistency in the active oddball task across subjects, in order to answer the question of whether this task is able to reliably detect conscious target processing in unresponsive patients. We asked 18 subjects to count rare targets and to ignore frequent standards and rare distractors in an auditory active oddball task. Event-related-potentials (ERPs) and time-frequency data were analyzed with permutation-t-tests on a single subject level. We plotted the group-average ERPs and time-frequency data, and evaluated the numbers of subjects showing significant differences between targets and distractors in certain time-ranges. The distinction between targets/distractors and standards was found to be significant in the time-range of the P300 in all participants. In contrast, significant differences between targets and distractors in the time-range of the P3a/b were found in 8 subjects, only. By including effects in the N1 and in a late negative component there remained 2 subjects who did not show a distinction between targets and distractors in the ERP. While time-frequency data showed prominent effects for target/distractor vs. standard, significant differences between targets and distractors were found in 2 subjects, only. The results suggest that time-frequency- and ERP-analysis of the active oddball task may not be sensitive enough to detect voluntary brain activation in unresponsive patients. In addition, we found that time-frequency analysis was even less informative than ERPs about the subject’s task performance. Despite suggesting the use of more sensitive paradigms and/or analysis techniques, the present results give further evidence that electroencephalographic research should rely more strongly on single-subject analysis because interpretations of group-effects may be misleading. Public Library of Science 2013-09-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3779217/ /pubmed/24073216 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074572 Text en © 2013 Höller et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Höller, Yvonne
Thomschewski, Aljoscha
Bergmann, Jürgen
Kronbichler, Martin
Crone, Julia S.
Schmid, Elisabeth V.
Butz, Kevin
Höller, Peter
Trinka, Eugen
EEG-Response Consistency across Subjects in an Active Oddball Task
title EEG-Response Consistency across Subjects in an Active Oddball Task
title_full EEG-Response Consistency across Subjects in an Active Oddball Task
title_fullStr EEG-Response Consistency across Subjects in an Active Oddball Task
title_full_unstemmed EEG-Response Consistency across Subjects in an Active Oddball Task
title_short EEG-Response Consistency across Subjects in an Active Oddball Task
title_sort eeg-response consistency across subjects in an active oddball task
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3779217/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24073216
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074572
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