Abstract

The latencies and amplitudes of averaged P3, and the latencies, amplitudes and frequency components of single EEG responses to target tones were analyzed in 9 control subjects (CS group), 6 epileptics whose mean IQ was 100 (EP group) and 6 epileptics whose mean IQ was 52 (RE group), using an auditory oddball task. All of the subjects responded to the target tones correctly and there were no differences in the incidence of error in response to the target tones, or in the latencies and amplitudes of the averaged P3 among the three groups. However, the reaction times (RTs) in the RE group were significantly longer than those in the other groups (P < 0.05). Single EEG responses to target tone (single-trial ERPs) were classified into 2 types, those with and those without the P3 component. Type 1 had the P3 component and was observed in 42% of all of the responses in the RE group, significantly less than those in the CS (64%) and EP (61%) groups. The peak latencies of P3 in type 1 were similar among the three groups, but the amplitudes of P3 in type 1 in the RE group were significantly greater than those in the CS and EP groups. RTs in the RE group were significantly longer than those in the other groups, and had no correlation with the P3 latencies of type 1. There was little difference in the results of the frequency analysis among the three groups. These results suggest that all subjects in three groups recognized the target tones correctly, but they did not evaluate every target tone, since the incidence of P3 was almost 60% in the CS and EP groups, and 40% in the RE group. The characteristics of cognition and evaluation in three groups were the same, but the decrease in incidence of evaluation and the dissociation between the cognition and the response execution might be caused by impairment of the subject-environment contact mechanism, which resulted in the decrement of IQ in the RE group.

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