The neural process of perception and evaluation for environmental hazards: evidence from event-related potentials
Perception and evaluation of environmental hazards are vital for human beings to avoid potential hazard. This study used event-related potentials to explore the neural temporal features in the human brain during the processing of environmental hazard presented by picture stimuli, and we found two st...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neuroreport 2014-05, Vol.25 (8), p.607-611 |
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creator | Ma, Qingguo Fu, Huijian Xu, Tao Pei, Guanxiong Chen, Xiaojian Hu, Yue Zhu, Chao |
description | Perception and evaluation of environmental hazards are vital for human beings to avoid potential hazard. This study used event-related potentials to explore the neural temporal features in the human brain during the processing of environmental hazard presented by picture stimuli, and we found two stages involved in processing pictures with environmental hazardthe relatively early automatic hazard perception stage indicated by P200 and the later hazard evaluation stage indicated by late positive potential. It provided certain evidence for the hazard perception two-stage model. The results indicated consistency between neural processing toward word and picture stimuli in the hazard evaluation tasks. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1097/WNR.0000000000000147 |
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subjects | Adult Analysis of Variance Attention - physiology Biological and medical sciences Electroencephalography Environment Evoked Potentials - physiology Female Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology Humans Male Photic Stimulation Safety Management User-Computer Interface Vertebrates: nervous system and sense organs Visual Perception - physiology Young Adult |
title | The neural process of perception and evaluation for environmental hazards: evidence from event-related potentials |
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