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An electrophysiological study of the insertion of overt response choice.
25
Citations
49
References
2000
Year
NeuropsychologyBehavioral Decision MakingInhibitory ProcessAffective NeuroscienceMotor ControlAttentionSocial SciencesExperimental Decision MakingCognitive ElectrophysiologyStimulus IdentificationOvert Response ChoiceMotor BehaviorSelection NegativityHealth SciencesSensorimotor ControlCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceResponse ChoiceSensorimotor IntegrationRehabilitationExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorNeurophysiologyNeuroscienceBrain Electrophysiology
Using electrophysiological measures, the authors studied changes in prestimulus state, stimulus identification, and response-related processing when, in a go/no-go task, forced choice between 2 overt go responses was inserted. The authors observed decreased prestimulus motor preparation (electromyogram), no change in stimulus identification time (selection negativity), a minor increase in response selection time (lateralized readiness potential), a large increase in response preparation time (lateralized readiness potential), a minor effect on response execution time (electromyogram), and a decrease in the activation of a response-inhibition process on no-go trials (frontal event-related potential). The existence of the response-inhibition process was verified by the presence of inverted lateralized readiness potentials on no-go trials. Pure insertion of response choice in a task seems impossible because the choice between activation and inhibition (go/no-go) always seems already present.
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