4.5 Article

Eliciting and Recording Event Related Potentials (ERPs) in Behaviourally Unresponsive Populations: A Retrospective Commentary on Critical Factors

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11070835

Keywords

disorders of consciousness; electroencephalography; N400; P3b; event related potentials

Categories

Funding

  1. Canada Foundation for Innovation [20889]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada [RGPIN-2016-03817]

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A consistent limitation when designing event-related potential paradigms and interpreting results is a lack of consideration of the multivariate factors that affect their elicitation and detection in behaviorally unresponsive individuals. This paper provides a retrospective commentary on three factors that influence the presence and morphology of long-latency event-related potentials-the P3b and N400. Based on critical factors, the strongest paradigms should be used to elicit ERPs in unresponsive populations, interpretation of ERP results should consider participant age, and stimulus presentation speed should be slower in unresponsive individuals. By applying these practices, result interpretation ambiguity can be minimized, confidence in conclusions can be increased, and understanding of the relationship between long-latency event-related potentials and states of consciousness can be advanced.
A consistent limitation when designing event-related potential paradigms and interpreting results is a lack of consideration of the multivariate factors that affect their elicitation and detection in behaviorally unresponsive individuals. This paper provides a retrospective commentary on three factors that influence the presence and morphology of long-latency event-related potentials-the P3b and N400. We analyze event-related potentials derived from electroencephalographic (EEG) data collected from small groups of healthy youth and healthy elderly to illustrate the effect of paradigm strength and subject age; we analyze ERPs collected from an individual with severe traumatic brain injury to illustrate the effect of stimulus presentation speed. Based on these critical factors, we support that: (1) the strongest paradigms should be used to elicit event-related potentials in unresponsive populations; (2) interpretation of event-related potential results should account for participant age; and (3) speed of stimulus presentation should be slower in unresponsive individuals. The application of these practices when eliciting and recording event-related potentials in unresponsive individuals will help to minimize result interpretation ambiguity, increase confidence in conclusions, and advance the understanding of the relationship between long-latency event-related potentials and states of consciousness.

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