Abstract

Averaged evoked potentials were recorded from Pz and left and right temporo-parietal electrodes to real speech words and human sounds in 8 right-handed subjects. Stimuli were presented in a “no task” condition where the subject was instructed to listen attentively, and a vigilance condition where the subject responded to a particular word or sound during a run of such stimuli. The vigilance condition produced two classes of stimuli: signals and non-signals. Evoked potentials to physically identical words or sounds were examined when they were “no task”, non-signal and signal stimuli. P300 amplitude increased significantly as a function of increasing task demands going from “no task” to non-signal to signal. When a strict statistical criterion for multiple comparisons (Bonferroni test) was applied in looking for asymmetries between hemispheres, only 2 isolated left greater than right differences turned out to be significant. Review of the literature concerning evoked potential correlates of differential hemispheric processing pointed up flaws in design, statistical technique, and inconsistencies in reported findings which suggested that while evoked potentials may sometimes reflect differences in hemispheric functioning, this effect is marginal at best.

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