Wilson G F, Swain C R, Ullsperger P
Armstrong Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH 45433-7022, USA.
Biol Psychol. 1998 Feb;47(2):137-58. doi: 10.1016/s0301-0511(97)00021-5.
A series of experiments were conducted to systematically evaluate the relative contributions of task difficulty and stimulus probability to P300 amplitudes. Scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded and the topographic distributions were evaluated during a multi-level cognitive task with an antecedent warning. In three separate studies, task difficulty (five levels), probability or expectedness (10-60%), and randomness (random or blocked presentation) were manipulated. Response accuracy, subjective ratings, and reference-free averages of the P300 components elicited by the warning stimuli were evaluated. Statistical analysis indicated that significantly larger P300s were associated with the more difficult task warnings except when memory tasks were presented in a blocked design, suggesting that neither task difficulty nor probability alone can account for variations in the P300 in a multi-level task scenario. Results are discussed with regard to adaptation-level theory.