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Visual search performance is predicted by both prestimulus and poststimulus electrical brain activity
Authors
A Delorme
A Kiesel
+37 more
AC Snyder
AM Tuladhar
B van den Berg
D Jokisch
D Talsma
DH Weissman
EK Vogel
GR Mangun
H van Dijk
J Cohen
J Evans
K Clark
K Grill-Spector
LG Faber
M Corbetta
M Corbetta
M Sigman
MaS Boksem
MS Worden
O Hauk
O Jensen
O Jensen
P Jolicœur
R Bakeman
R Fellinger
R Oostenveld
R Sireteanu
RC MacCallum
RJ Barry
S Hanslmayr
S Hanslmayr
S Olejnik
SJ Luck
T Grent-’t-Jong
T Grent-’t-Jong
V Mazza
W Klimesch
Publication date
1 January 2016
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
© The Author(s) 2016. An individual's performance on cognitive and perceptual tasks varies considerably across time and circumstances. We investigated neural mechanisms underlying such performance variability using regression-based analyses to examine trial-by-trial relationships between response times (RTs) and different facets of electrical brain activity. Thirteen participants trained five days on a color-popout visual-search task, with EEG recorded on days one and five. The task was to find a color-popout target ellipse in a briefly presented array of ellipses and discriminate its orientation. Later within a session, better preparatory attention (reflected by less prestimulus Alpha-band oscillatory activity) and better poststimulus early visual responses (reflected by larger sensory N1 waves) correlated with faster RTs. However, N1 amplitudes decreased by half throughout each session, suggesting adoption of a more efficient search strategy within a session. Additionally, fast RTs were preceded by earlier and larger lateralized N2pc waves, reflecting faster and stronger attentional orienting to the targets. Finally, SPCN waves associated with target-orientation discrimination were smaller for fast RTs in the first but not the fifth session, suggesting optimization with practice. Collectively, these results delineate variations in visual search processes that change over an experimental session, while also pointing to cortical mechanisms underlying performance in visual search
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info:doi/10.1038%2Fsrep37718
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