Title of article
The influence of perceptual and semantic categorization on inhibitory processing as measured by the N2–P3 response
Author/Authors
Maguire، نويسنده , , Mandy J. and Brier، نويسنده , , Matthew R. and Moore، نويسنده , , Patricia S. and Ferree، نويسنده , , Thomas C. and Ray، نويسنده , , Dylan and Mostofsky، نويسنده , , Stewart and Hart Jr.، نويسنده , , John and Kraut، نويسنده , , Michael A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
8
From page
196
To page
203
Abstract
In daily activities, humans must attend and respond to a range of important items and inhibit and not respond to unimportant distractions. Our current understanding of these processes is largely based on perceptually simple stimuli. This study investigates the interaction of conceptual-semantic categorization and inhibitory processing using Event Related Potentials (ERPs). Participants completed three Go–NoGo tasks that increased systematically in the degree of conceptual-semantic information necessary to respond correctly (from single items to categories of objects and animals). Findings indicate that the N2 response reflects inhibitory processing but does not change significantly with task difficulty. The P3 NoGo amplitude, on the other hand, is attenuated by task difficulty. Further, the latency of the peak of the P3 NoGo response elicited by the most difficult task is significantly later than are the peaks detected during performance of the other two tasks. Thus, the level of complexity of conceptual-semantic representations influences inhibitory processing in a systematic way. This inhibition paradigm may be a key for investigating inhibitory dysfunction in patient populations.
Keywords
event related potentials , N2–P3 , Inhibition , Go–NoGo , Visual categorization , Object–animal categorization , Conceptual difficulty
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Record number
2250008
Link To Document