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Resolution: standard / high Figure 3.
Event-related oscillations for all the electrodes. The upper part presents the event-related oscillations (EROs) time-frequency chart
for Targets on the left (X-mark), and rare distractors (Novels) on the right ("no-smoking"
symbol). It is shown for the 24- to 44-Hz band, and between -320 to 600 ms, summing
up all 9 electrodes for all the subjects. The color scale represents the relative
amount of power in standard deviation (reference period from -320 to 0 ms). This illustrates
that the 32- to 38-Hz EROs in response to Targets are quite low in response to Novels.
It thus does not come as a surprise that the statistical comparison of Target-related
vs. Novel-related power for all electrodes is significant (lower time-frequency chart).
Cold colors code for a trend towards greater power in the Novel condition, whereas
hot colors represent greater power level in the Target condition. The scale represents
the cumulative p distribution stated in percent. Regions above the .05 and .01 threshold
are contoured in black. The numbers 1, 5, 95 and 99 represent the cumulative p value
in percent, respectively equivalent to.01, .05 for Novels and .05, .01 for Targets.
The solid and dotted black lines correspond to the response time and standard deviation,
respectively. The result table provides the statistics for the time interval from
200 to 500 ms, and from 24 to 44 Hz, using a threshold p ≤ 0.01. Volume and time-frequency
cluster p values are given corrected for multiple comparisons. Note that the ensemble
statistics represent the probability to have the given amount of time-frequency points
above the threshold (12 over 165 time-frequency points), and not the number of clusters
as in EPs or fMRI. At the same threshold, there were no significantly larger power
emissions in the Novel than in the Target condition (not even at the .05 threshold).
Foucher et al. BMC Neuroscience 2003 4:22 doi:10.1186/1471-2202-4-22 |