Authors
Anna Wilsch, Molly J Henry, Björn Herrmann, Burkhard Maess, Jonas Obleser
Publication date
2015/7/1
Journal
Cerebral cortex
Volume
25
Issue
7
Pages
1938-1946
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Enhanced alpha power compared with a baseline can reflect states of increased cognitive load, for example, when listening to speech in noise. Can knowledge about “when” to listen (temporal expectations) potentially counteract cognitive load and concomitantly reduce alpha? The current magnetoencephalography (MEG) experiment induced cognitive load using an auditory delayed-matching-to-sample task with 2 syllables S1 and S2 presented in speech-shaped noise. Temporal expectation about the occurrence of S1 was manipulated in 3 different cue conditions: “Neutral” (uninformative about foreperiod), “early-cued” (short foreperiod), and “late-cued” (long foreperiod). Alpha power throughout the trial was highest when the cue was uninformative about the onset time of S1 (neutral) and lowest for the late-cued condition. This alpha-reducing effect of late compared with neutral cues was most evident during …
Scholar articles
A Wilsch, MJ Henry, B Herrmann, B Maess, J Obleser - Cerebral cortex, 2015