Electrophysiological measurement of interest during walking in a simulated environment

A reliable neuroscientific technique for objectively estimating the degree of interest in a real environment is currently required in the research fields of neuroergonomics and neuroeconomics. Toward the development of such a technique, the present study explored electrophysiological measures that r...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of psychophysiology 2014-09, Vol.93 (3), p.363-370
Hauptverfasser: Takeda, Yuji, Okuma, Takashi, Kimura, Motohiro, Kurata, Takeshi, Takenaka, Takeshi, Iwaki, Sunao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A reliable neuroscientific technique for objectively estimating the degree of interest in a real environment is currently required in the research fields of neuroergonomics and neuroeconomics. Toward the development of such a technique, the present study explored electrophysiological measures that reflect an observer's interest in a nearly-real visual environment. Participants were asked to walk through a simulated shopping mall and the attractiveness of the shopping mall was manipulated by opening and closing the shutters of stores. During the walking task, participants were exposed to task-irrelevant auditory probes (two-stimulus oddball sequence). The results showed a smaller P2/early P3a component of task-irrelevant auditory event-related potentials and a larger lambda response of eye-fixation-related potentials in an interesting environment (i.e., open-shutter condition) than in a boring environment (i.e., closed-shutter condition); these findings can be reasonably explained by supposing that participants allocated more attentional resources to visual information in an interesting environment than in a boring environment, and thus residual attentional resources that could be allocated to task-irrelevant auditory probes were reduced. The P2/early P3a component and the lambda response may be useful measures of interest in a real visual environment. •Electrophysiological measures that reflect interest in an environment were explored.•Task-irrelevant auditory probes were given during walking in a simulated mall.•The P2/eP3a component of auditory ERP decreased with the observer's interest.•The lambda response of EFRP increased with the observer's interest.•These components can be mutually complementary measures of an observer's interest.
ISSN:0167-8760
1872-7697
DOI:10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2014.05.012