NO TO HATTATSU
Online ISSN : 1884-7668
Print ISSN : 0029-0831
ISSN-L : 0029-0831
Visual Perception of Japanese Characters and Complicated Figures
Developmental Changes of Visual P300 Event-Related Potentials
Yoshimi SataMasumi InagakiSeiko ShiraneMakiko Kaga
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2002 Volume 34 Issue 4 Pages 300-306

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Abstract
In order to evaluate developmental change of visual perception, the P300 event-related potentials (ERPs) of visual oddball task were recorded in 34 healthy volunteers ranging from 7 to 37 years of age. The latency and amplitude of visual P300 in response to the Japanese ideogram stimuli (a pair of familiar Kanji characters or unfamiliar Kanji characters) and a pair of meaningless complicated figures were measured. Visual P300 was dominant at parietal area in almost all subjects. There was a significant difference of P300 latency among the three tasks. Reaction time to the both kind of Kanji tasks were significantly shorter than those to the complicated figure task. P300 latencies to the familiar Kanji, unfamiliar Kanji and figure stimuli decreased until 25.8, 26.9 and 29.4 years of age, respectively, and regression analysis revealed that a positive quadratic function could be fitted to the data. Around 9 years of age, the P300 latency/age slope was largest in the unfamiliar Kanji task. These findings suggest that visual P300 development depends on both the complexity of the tasks and specificity of the stimuli, which might reflect the variety in visual information processing.
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© Japanese Society of Child Neurology
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