Reduced brain responses to novel sounds in depression: P3 findings in a novelty oddball task.

Autor: Bruder GE; Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, NY 10032, USA. bruderg@pi.cpmc.columbia.edu, Kroppmann CJ, Kayser J, Stewart JW, McGrath PJ, Tenke CE
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Psychiatry research [Psychiatry Res] 2009 Dec 30; Vol. 170 (2-3), pp. 218-23. Date of Electronic Publication: 2009 Nov 08.
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2008.10.023
Abstrakt: There have been conflicting findings as to whether the P3 brain potential to targets in oddball tasks is reduced in depressed patients. The P3 to novel distracter stimuli in a three-stimulus oddball task has a more frontocentral topography than P3 to targets and is associated with different cognitive operations and neural generators. The novelty P3 potential was predicted to be reduced in depressed patients. EEG was recorded from 30 scalp electrodes (nose reference) in 20 unmedicated depressed patients and 20 matched healthy controls during a novelty oddball task with three stimuli: infrequent target tones (12%), frequent standard tones (76%) and nontarget novel stimuli, e.g., animal or environment sounds (12%). Novel stimuli evoked a P3 potential with shorter peak latency and more frontocentral topography than the parietal-maximum P3b to target stimuli. The novelty P3 was markedly reduced in depressed patients compared to controls. Although there was a trend for patients to also have smaller parietal P3b to targets, this group difference was not statistically significant. Nor was there a group difference in the earlier N1 or N2 potentials. The novelty P3 reduction in depressed patients is indicative of a deficit in orienting of attention and evaluation of novel environmental sounds.
Databáze: MEDLINE