References The P300 is one of the most prominent and well-studied event-related potentials (ERPs) in the literature. The P300 is also a primary discriminant signal for many brain-computer interface (BCI) systems. It has been well established that the P300 amplitude and latency, along with reaction time, are directly linked to target discriminability. However, since the majority of P300 studies using an odd-ball or target-detection paradigm have a fixed or unquantified level of target discriminability, it remains unclear how the P300 is systematically modulated by stimulus properties affecting target detection. In this study we quantified visual properties of target objects within a large ensemble of natural images. Using a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) paradigm, we were able to systematically measure the effect of these properties on the behavioral reaction time (RT), P300, and single-trial classification accuracy. ERP & Single-trial Classification Target Size & P300 Group Effects
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