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Contributions of spectral frequency analyses to the study of P50 ERP amplitude and suppression in bipolar disorder with or without a history of psychosis
Authors:Christine A Carroll  Paul D Kieffaber  Jenifer L Vohs  Brian F O’Donnell  Anantha Shekhar  William P Hetrick
Institution:1. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN;2. Department of Psychology, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA;3. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN

Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN

Larue D. Carter Memorial Hospital, Indianapolis, IN, USA;4. Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN

Larue D. Carter Memorial Hospital, Indianapolis, IN, USA

Abstract:Objective: The present study investigated event-related brain potential (ERP) indices of auditory processing and sensory gating in bipolar disorder and subgroups of bipolar patients with or without a history of psychosis using the P50 dual-click procedure. Auditory-evoked activity in two discrete frequency bands also was explored to distinguish between sensory registration and selective attention deficits. Methods: Thirty-one individuals with bipolar disorder and 28 non-psychiatric controls were compared on ERP indices of auditory processing using a dual-click procedure. In addition to conventional P50 ERP peak-picking techniques, quantitative frequency analyses were applied to the ERP data to isolate stages of information processing associated with sensory registration (20–50 Hz; gamma band) and selective attention (0–20 Hz; low-frequency band). Results: Compared to the non-psychiatric control group, patients with bipolar disorder exhibited reduced S1 response magnitudes for the conventional P50 peak-picking and low-frequency response analyses. A bipolar subgroup effect suggested that the attenuated S1 magnitudes from the P50 peak-picking and low-frequency analyses were largely attributable to patients without a history of psychosis. Conclusions: The analysis of distinct frequency bands of the auditory-evoked response elicited during the dual-click procedure allowed further specification of the nature of auditory sensory processing and gating deficits in bipolar disorder with or without a history of psychosis. The observed S1 effects in the low-frequency band suggest selective attention deficits in bipolar patients, especially those patients without a history of psychosis, which may reflect a diminished capacity to selectively attend to salient stimuli as opposed to impairments of inhibitory sensory processes.
Keywords:auditory evoked response  bipolar disorder  P50  sensory gating
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