Abstract
The present study investigated neural correlations underlying the psychological processing of stimuli with various degrees of self-relevance. Event-related potentials were recorded for names that differ in their extent of relevance to the study participant. Participants performed a three-stimulus oddball task. ERP results showed larger P2 averaged amplitudes for highly self-relevant names than for moderately self-relevant, minimally self-relevant, and non-self-relevant names. N2 averaged amplitudes were larger for the highly self-relevant names than for the moderately self-relevant, minimally self-relevant, and non-self-relevant names. Highly self-relevant names elicited larger P3 averaged amplitudes than the moderately self-relevant names which, in turn, had larger P3 values than for minimally self-relevant names. Minimally self-relevant stimuli elicited larger P3 averaged amplitudes than non-self-relevant stimuli. These results demonstrate a degree effect of self-reference, which was indexed using electrophysiological activity. © 2013 Fan et al.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Fan, W., Chen, J., Wang, X. Y., Cai, R., Tan, Q., Chen, Y., … Zhong, Y. (2013). Electrophysiological correlation of the degree of self-reference effect. PLoS ONE, 8(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080289
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.