Effects of temporal trial-by-trial cuing on early and late stages of auditory processing: Evidence from event-related potentials |
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Authors: | Alexa Lampar Kathrin Lange |
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Affiliation: | Department of Experimental Psychology, Heinrich-Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany. |
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Abstract: | Temporal-cuing studies show faster responding to stimuli at an attended versus unattended time point. Whether the mechanisms involved in this temporal orienting of attention are located early or late in the processing stream has not been answered unequivocally. To address this question, we measured event-related potentials in two versions of an auditory temporal cuing task: Stimuli at the uncued time point either required a response (Experiment 1) or did not (Experiment 2). In both tasks, attention was oriented to the cued time point, but attention could be selectively focused on the cued time point only in Experiment 2. In both experiments, temporal orienting was associated with a late positivity in the timerange of the P3. An early enhancement in the timerange of the auditory N1 was observed only in Experiment 2. Thus, temporal attention improves auditory processing at early sensory levels only when it can be focused selectively. |
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