TY - JOUR
T1 - Dissociating the Influence of Affective Word Content and Cognitive Processing Demands on the Late Positive Potential
AU - Nowparast Rostami, Hadiseh
AU - Ouyang, Guang
AU - Bayer, Mareike
AU - Schacht, Annekathrin
AU - Zhou, Changsong
AU - Sommer, Werner
N1 - Funding information:
This work was partially supported by Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU) Strategic Development Fund, the HKBU Faculty Research Grant (FRG2/13-14/022), and Germany-Hong Kong Joint Research Scheme (G-HK012/12), the HKBU Matching Proof-of-Concept Fund to GO and CZ.
Publisher copyright:
Copyright © 2015, Springer Science Business Media New York
PY - 2016/1
Y1 - 2016/1
N2 - The late positive potential (LPP) elicited by affective stimuli in the event-related brain potential (ERP) is often assumed to be a member of the P3 family. The present study addresses the relationship of the LPP to the classic P3b in a published data set, using a non-parametric permutation test for topographical comparisons, and residue iteration decomposition to assess the temporal features of the LPP and the P3b by decomposing the ERP into several component clusters according to their latency variability. The experiment orthogonally manipulated arousal and valence of words, which were either read or judged for lexicality. High-arousing and positive valenced words induced a larger LPP than low-arousing and negative valenced words, respectively, and the LDT elicited a larger P3b than reading. The experimental manipulation of arousal, valence, and task yielded main effects without any interactions on ERP amplitude in the LPP/P3b time range. The arousal and valence effects partially differed from the task effect in scalp topography; in addition, whereas the late positive component elicited by affective stimuli, defined as LPP, was stimulus-locked, the late positive component elicited by task demand, defined as P3b, was mainly latency-variable. Therefore LPP and P3b manifest different subcomponents.
AB - The late positive potential (LPP) elicited by affective stimuli in the event-related brain potential (ERP) is often assumed to be a member of the P3 family. The present study addresses the relationship of the LPP to the classic P3b in a published data set, using a non-parametric permutation test for topographical comparisons, and residue iteration decomposition to assess the temporal features of the LPP and the P3b by decomposing the ERP into several component clusters according to their latency variability. The experiment orthogonally manipulated arousal and valence of words, which were either read or judged for lexicality. High-arousing and positive valenced words induced a larger LPP than low-arousing and negative valenced words, respectively, and the LDT elicited a larger P3b than reading. The experimental manipulation of arousal, valence, and task yielded main effects without any interactions on ERP amplitude in the LPP/P3b time range. The arousal and valence effects partially differed from the task effect in scalp topography; in addition, whereas the late positive component elicited by affective stimuli, defined as LPP, was stimulus-locked, the late positive component elicited by task demand, defined as P3b, was mainly latency-variable. Therefore LPP and P3b manifest different subcomponents.
KW - Emotion
KW - Event-related potential (ERP)
KW - Late positive potential (LPP)
KW - P300
KW - Permutation test
KW - Residue iteration decomposition (RIDE)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84953367093&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10548-015-0438-2
DO - 10.1007/s10548-015-0438-2
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 26012382
AN - SCOPUS:84953367093
SN - 0896-0267
VL - 29
SP - 82
EP - 93
JO - Brain Topography
JF - Brain Topography
IS - 1
ER -