Five outlined geometric figures of equal contour length were presented monocularly below the fixation point (FP); an upright equilateral triangle (upright triangle), an inverted equilateral triangle (inverted triangle), an upright square (square), a 45°-tilted square (diamond) and a circle. The angular separation between FP and the top of the figures was held constant. Transient visual evoked potentials (VEPs) were recorded monopolarly from inion, 4, 7,10 cm above it (I, I4, I7, I10) and Cz for ten subjects. The grand-averaged subtracted waves were obtained between the figure and blank (control) conditions. N1 (mean peak latency: 155 ms) and P2 (240 ms) waves were identified. ANOVAs were conducted for the latency and amplitude values. Main results were as follows: On the N1 amplitude at 14 and I, the upright triangle, inverted triangle and diamond figures evoked significantly larger responses than did the square and the circle. However, no significant difference was found among the former three figures. These findings on the N1 amplitude suggest that the effect of a triangle is orientation-free and that of a square is orientation-bound. © 1997 Japanese Psychological Association. Published by Blackwell Publishers Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Ito, M., Sugata, T., & Kuwabara, H. (1997). Visual evoked potentials to geometric forms: Effects of spatial orientation. Japanese Psychological Research, 39(4), 339–344. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-5884.00066
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