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Chapter 3 explores event-related potentials (ERPs), one of electroencephalography’s most powerful analytical techniques for investigating cognitive processing. The chapter traces ERPs’ evolution from Pauline and Hallowell Davis’s pioneering work in 1939 through its exponential growth as a research methodology. It explains how ERPs extract meaningful neural signals by time-locking and averaging EEG segments surrounding stimulus presentations, thereby revealing characteristic voltage deflections that correspond to specific cognitive processes. The text examines key ERP components, including C1, P1, N1, P2, N2, and P300, detailing their temporal progression, neuroanatomical origins, and functional significance in the processing hierarchy. It evaluates ERPs’ exceptional capacity to discriminate between processing stages occurring within milliseconds of each other, from early sensory encoding through attention allocation to semantic processing. The chapter addresses methodological considerations essential for robust ERP research, including experimental design principles, artifact reduction techniques, and the interpretation of scalp topographies. By analyzing ERPs’ comparative advantages, including millisecond-precise temporal resolution, ability to track covert processing without behavioral responses, and sensitivity to processing stage differences, alongside their limitations in spatial localization and specific experimental contexts, the chapter positions ERPs as a vital methodology for understanding the sequential unfolding of perceptual and cognitive processes in the human brain.
Deficits of mismatch negativity (MMN) in schizophrenia and individuals at risk for psychosis have been replicated many times. Several studies have also demonstrated the occurrence of subclinical psychotic symptoms within the general population. However, none has yet investigated MMN in individuals from the general population who report subclinical psychotic symptoms.
Methods
The MMN to duration-, frequency-, and intensity deviants was recorded in 217 nonclinical individuals classified into a control group (n = 72) and three subclinical groups: paranoid (n = 44), psychotic (n = 51), and mixed paranoid-psychotic (n = 50). Amplitudes of MMN at frontocentral electrodes were referenced to average. Based on a three-source model of MMN generation, we conducted an MMN source analysis and compared the amplitudes of surface electrodes and sources among groups.
Results
We found no significant differences in MMN amplitudes of surface electrodes. However, significant differences in MMN generation among the four groups were revealed at the frontal source for duration-deviant stimuli (P = 0.01). We also detected a trend-level difference (P = 0.05) in MMN activity among those groups for frequency deviants at the frontal source.
Conclusions
Individuals from the general population who report psychotic symptoms are a heterogeneous group. However, alterations exist in their frontal MMN activity. This increased activity might be an indicator of more sensitive perception regarding changes in the environment for individuals with subclinical psychotic symptoms.
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