Olaya İlişkin Potansiyellerin Saklanmış Bilginin Tespitinde Kullanımı: Kelime, Nesne ve Yüz Tanımanın Karşılaştırılması
Özet
The purpose
of this study was to investigate which type of visual concealed information, in
the form of text, object and face pictures, would cause distinctive event
related potentials. We compared electrophysiological and behavioral data
(reaction time and correct button press ratios) of twenty volunteer subjects
aged 18-30 years. The subjects attended three-stimulus-protocol which was
consisted of text, object and face pictures. Each test was comprised of six
different pictures, one of them was meaningful (prob), one of them was target
and the others were nonsense (standard) for subject. The subjects were
instructed to press a button when they saw target picture and press another
button when they saw other pictures. We calculated reaction times and
correct button press ratios during button press task. Event related potentials
were recorded simultaneously during the button press task. Each subject's
event related potential was averaged to compare P300-based event related
potential amplitudes. We found a significant increase between prob and target
picture's mean P300s amplitudes compared to standard pictures' mean P300s
amplitudes in text, object and face picture categories. However, these values
were not significant between categories after these values were standardized
and then compared. We could not find significant difference between
categories in P300 latencies. When mean reaction times are compared, there
is significant difference in target pictures reaction times compared to standard
pictures reaction times. However, no significance is found in prob reaction
times compared to standards' reaction times, even though probs' reaction
times have gotten longer. There is not a significant difference in correct button
press ratios. According to our results, there is no significant difference among
face, text and object categories in detection of meaningful information visuals
by concealed information test. Previous studies revealed different results
although all of them used the same methods with small alterations. The
reason of having different results might be due to simple changes in methods.
These subtle changes may affect subject's motivation, or other factors such as cultural and personality differences may be the culprit.