Reliability of the P3 component in a 3-stimulus concealed information test with known and unknown stimuli

Brain Cogn. 2023 Jun 13;170:106004. doi: 10.1016/j.bandc.2023.106004. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTThe parietal P3 amplitude of the event-related potential (ERP) has been highlighted to signal stimulus salience in concealed information tests (CITs) with known and unknown stimuli. To extend previous validity investigations in deception research, the reliability of the early parietal P3 amplitude in a 3-stimulus CIT including known and unknown stimuli has been investigated in a sample of N = 68 participants. Variations of Cronbach's Alpha and split-half reliability (odd-even, 1st vs. 2nd half) of the early parietal P3 amplitude were considered for ERP quantification method (peak-to-peak, mean, baseline-to-peak), epoch selection strategies (chronological vs. random) and number of epochs (10-40) in three stimulus types (probe, target, irrelevant). Excellent reliability coefficients have been summarized for number of epochs, P3 quantifications, and epoch selection strategies. Moreover, the best-practice recommendations highlight mandatory combinations of epoch selection strategy, number of epochs and P3 quantifications to ensure robust and excellent reliabilities of the early parietal P3 amplitude in a 3-stimulus CIT with known (probe, target) and unknown (irrelevant) stimuli. The robustness of mandatory excellent reliability coefficients for the early parietal P3 has been discussed for two data tracks in single-case analyses.PMID:37320930 | DOI:10.1016/j.bandc.2023.106004
Source: Brain and Cognition - Category: Neurology Authors: Source Type: research
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