Abstract

The decrease in the P300 brain response latency with increasing age is often taken to reflect maturation of cognitive processes in children. We found that in abnormally distractible children the auditory P300 latency decreased significantly when the inter-target interval (ITI) increased in a stimulus discrimination task. We speculate that the sensory memory trace of the target stimulus may decay in distractible children during longer ITIs, and consequently the next target stimulus may activate the brain's orienting networks that are known to generate shorter latency brain responses. The relative strength by which the functionally different neural networks underlying the cognitive brain responses are activated may contribute significantly to the latency measures of these responses. The presumption that a short P300 latency equals to fast processing may thus be over-simplistic, especially in children.

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