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Nonaffective motivation modulates the sustained LPP (1,000-2,000 ms)

Past work has demonstrated that the sustained late positive potential (LPP) is modulated by motivational demands of affective content. The current experiment sought to investigate how motivational demands in nonaffective tasks would modulate the sustained LPP. Using a modified oddball paradigm, part...

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Published in:Psychophysiology 2013-12, Vol.50 (12), p.1251-1254
Main Authors: Gable, Philip A., Adams, David L.
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Language:English
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description Past work has demonstrated that the sustained late positive potential (LPP) is modulated by motivational demands of affective content. The current experiment sought to investigate how motivational demands in nonaffective tasks would modulate the sustained LPP. Using a modified oddball paradigm, participants either counted the number of appearances of a nonaffective target or determined the duration length of the target. Results showed that targets in both the counted and duration tasks produced larger LPPs in the early window (400–1,000 ms) than the neutral standard. Only the duration target produced larger LPPs in the late time window (1,000–2,000 ms) than the neutral standard. These results suggest that the late LPP is a measure of persistent motivated attentional processing and can be modulated by nonaffective motivation.
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source Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; SPORTDiscus
subjects Affect
Affect - physiology
Attention
Electroencephalography
Emotions
Evoked Potentials - physiology
Female
Humans
Late positive potential
Male
Motivation
Motivation - physiology
Photic Stimulation
Physiological psychology
Task relevance
Young Adult
title Nonaffective motivation modulates the sustained LPP (1,000-2,000 ms)
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