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Ergebnisse 2 Einträge
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One approach to investigate psychophysiological processes occurring in the Concealed Information Test (CIT) is to use a parallel task, which engages specific mental activity in addition to the CIT. In the present study, the influence of an interfering n-back task on the physiological responses in a Concealed Information Test (CIT) was investigated. Forty participants underwent a mock-crime experiment with a modified CIT. In a within-subject design, the CIT was applied in blocks with and without an additional n-back task. Electrodermal activity (EDA), respiration line length (RLL), heart rate (HR), and finger pulse waveform length (FPWL) were registered. Reaction times in the n-back task and the CIT were recorded. The parallel task enhanced the differential EDA response to probe vs. irrelevant items, while it diminished the response differences for RLL and phasic HR. Results shed light upon working-memory-related processes in the CIT. The diverging effects of the interfering mental activity on electrodermal and cardiopulmonary measures, if replicable, might contribute to a better understanding of the psychophysiological responsiveness underlying the CIT.
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A Concealed Information Test (CIT) investigates differential physiological responses to deed-related (probe) vs. irrelevant items. The present study focused on the detection of concealed information using simultaneous recordings of autonomic and brain electrical measures. As a secondary issue, verbal and pictorial presentations were compared with respect to their influence on the recorded measures. Thirty-one participants underwent a mock-crime scenario with a combined verbal and pictorial presentation of nine items. The subsequent CIT, designed with respect to event-related potential (ERP) measurement, used a 3-3.5s interstimulus interval. The item presentation modality, i.e. pictures or written words, was varied between subjects; no response was required from the participants. In addition to electroencephalogram (EEG), electrodermal activity (EDA), electrocardiogram (ECG), respiratory activity, and finger plethysmogram were recorded. A significant probe-vs.-irrelevant effect was found for each of the measures. Compared to sole ERP measurement, the combination of ERP and EDA yielded incremental information for detecting concealed information. Although, EDA per se did not reach the predictive value known from studies primarily designed for peripheral physiological measurement. Presentation modality neither influenced the detection accuracy for autonomic measures nor EEG measures; this underpins the equivalence of verbal and pictorial item presentation in a CIT, regardless of the physiological measures recorded. Future studies should further clarify whether the incremental validity observed in the present study reflects a differential sensitivity of ERP and EDA to different sub-processes in a CIT.
Erkunden
Team
- Vaitl (2)
Eintragsart
Sprache
- Englisch (2)
Thema
- Photic Stimulation/methods
- Acoustic Stimulation/methods (1)
- Adolescent (1)
- Adult (2)
- Analysis of Variance (1)
- Attention/physiology (1)
- Cognition/*physiology (1)
- *Deception (1)
- Electrocardiography/methods (1)
- Electroencephalography/methods (1)
- Evoked Potentials/*physiology (1)
- Female (2)
- Fingers/blood supply (1)
- Galvanic Skin Response/*physiology (1)
- Galvanic Skin Response/physiology (1)
- Guilt (1)
- Heart Rate/*physiology (1)
- Heart Rate/physiology (1)
- Humans (2)
- Inhibition, Psychological (1)
- Lie Detection/*psychology (1)
- Logistic Models (1)
- Male (2)
- Memory, Short-Term/*physiology (1)
- Perceptual Masking/*physiology (1)
- Plethysmography/methods (1)
- Reaction Time/physiology (1)
- Respiration (1)
- Respiratory Rate/physiology (1)
- Time Factors (1)
- Young Adult (2)