As before, in each trial of the experiment a single syllable was played followed by a dichotic syllable pair, and in some cases one of the syllables in the pair repeated the prime syllable. The trials were categorized based on whether the repeated syllable was selected or not, as shown in the figure below.
A strong behavioural effect was seen as in the previous studies. The ERP analysis was optimized to identify differences in the early attention processing (i.e. the N200s) between the different response categories. ERPs were extracted for three midline electrodes from four relevant time-windows and compared between the conditions using repeated measures ANOVA. Significant effects were seen in both the prime-related (left in the figure below) and in the dichotic target-related activity (right in the figure below).
Trials where the participant reported the non-primed syllable (prime ignored trials) showed more negative ERPs at prime presentation, which may indicate inhibition of the prime representation. Trials where the participant reported the primed syllable (prime reported trials) showed more negative ERPs at target presentation, which may indicate cognitive conflict and effortful response selection. In reference to the theoretical framework presented previously, the data suggest that the interplay of a proactive inhibition bias (during prime presentation) and a reactive potential for conflict (during target presentation) is involved in causing the primed dichotic listening effect.
Sætrevik, Huster & Herrmann (2013) Proactive and reactive sequential effects on selective attention - Brain and Cognition
There is also a second data set, with EEG recorded from a larger data set doing a sequence of dichotic listening trials which we will hopefully go on to publish some day.