Massed and distributed repetition of natural scenes: Brain potentials and oscillatory activity.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Massed and distributed repetition of natural scenes: Brain potentials and oscillatory activity.
Authors: Ferrari, Vera, Bradley, Margaret M., Codispoti, Maurizio, Lang, Peter J.
Source: Psychophysiology. Jul2015, Vol. 52 Issue 7, p865-872. 8p. 2 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Subjects: Evoked potentials (Electrophysiology), Habituation (Neuropsychology), Electromyography, Brain imaging, Learning, Data analysis
Abstract: Neural measures of repetition can result in either repetition suppression or enhancement effects, with enhancement sometimes interpreted as indicating episodic retrieval, rather than stimulus habituation. Here, we manipulated whether repetitions were massed (consecutive) or distributed (intermixed) and measured event-related potentials and oscillatory activity, investigating the question of whether there is evidence of 'spontaneous' episodic retrieval for distributed, but not massed, repetition. Results showed that distributed repetition uniquely prompted a significant centroparietal old-new effect as well as enhanced theta, compared to either novel presentations or massed repetitions, consistent with a hypothesis of spontaneous retrieval. Massed repetition, on the other hand, prompted repetition suppression and reduction of the N2/P2. Taken together, the data suggest that distributed repetition may facilitate later memory performance because it spontaneously retrieves prior representations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
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Abstract:Neural measures of repetition can result in either repetition suppression or enhancement effects, with enhancement sometimes interpreted as indicating episodic retrieval, rather than stimulus habituation. Here, we manipulated whether repetitions were massed (consecutive) or distributed (intermixed) and measured event-related potentials and oscillatory activity, investigating the question of whether there is evidence of 'spontaneous' episodic retrieval for distributed, but not massed, repetition. Results showed that distributed repetition uniquely prompted a significant centroparietal old-new effect as well as enhanced theta, compared to either novel presentations or massed repetitions, consistent with a hypothesis of spontaneous retrieval. Massed repetition, on the other hand, prompted repetition suppression and reduction of the N2/P2. Taken together, the data suggest that distributed repetition may facilitate later memory performance because it spontaneously retrieves prior representations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ISSN:00485772
DOI:10.1111/psyp.12424