2011
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-011-2919-1
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Event-related potentials in adolescents with different cognitive styles: field dependence and field independence

Abstract: Field dependence/independence (FD/FI) is an important dimension of personality and cognitive styles. Different ability in mobilizing and/or allocating mental-attentional capacity was considered to be the most possible explanation for the FDI cognitive style. Many studies on characterizing the functional neuroanatomy of attentional control indicated the existence of a dissociable sub-process of conflict-monitoring and "cognitive control" system. However, little was known about it. We might dissociate "cognitive… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Ample evidence has associated the analytics (FIs) with the ability to selectively attend to a given piece of information in the presence of distracting elements to a greater extent than wholists (FDs; Avolio, Alexander, Barrett, & Sterns, 1981;Bialystok, 1992;Burton, Moore, & Holmes, 1995;Guisande, Paramo, Tinajero, & Almeida, 2007;Jia, Zhang, & Li, 2014;Zelniker, 1989;Zhang & Noyes, 2008). Accordingly, some researchers (Meng et al, 2012) have suggested that FDs and FIs may be essentially different in how they mobilize or allocate attentional resources. FDs are inclined to process information in a superficial or automated way whereas FIs tend to engage in deeper processing (Meng et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Ample evidence has associated the analytics (FIs) with the ability to selectively attend to a given piece of information in the presence of distracting elements to a greater extent than wholists (FDs; Avolio, Alexander, Barrett, & Sterns, 1981;Bialystok, 1992;Burton, Moore, & Holmes, 1995;Guisande, Paramo, Tinajero, & Almeida, 2007;Jia, Zhang, & Li, 2014;Zelniker, 1989;Zhang & Noyes, 2008). Accordingly, some researchers (Meng et al, 2012) have suggested that FDs and FIs may be essentially different in how they mobilize or allocate attentional resources. FDs are inclined to process information in a superficial or automated way whereas FIs tend to engage in deeper processing (Meng et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Accordingly, some researchers (Meng et al, 2012) have suggested that FDs and FIs may be essentially different in how they mobilize or allocate attentional resources. FDs are inclined to process information in a superficial or automated way whereas FIs tend to engage in deeper processing (Meng et al, 2012). This, combined with evidence that FDs generally have the same mental-attentional capacity as their same-aged FI peers (e.g., Guisande et al, 2007;Pascual-Leone, 1987), may explain why analytics in the present study were unable to generate an integrated decision in conscious thought, unlike wholists.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three of the most studied attributes of the N170 include manipulations of face inversion (Itier & Taylor, 2004), facial race (Jacques et al, 2007;Vizioli et al, 2010) and emotional expression (Righart & de Gelder, 2008). Field dependence/independence (FD/FI) cognitive styles have been studied by using matching and non-matching shapes, which were indexed by N170 (Meng et al, 2012). Goode and his colleagues used working-memory and attentional inhibition (WM/I) tasks to determine whether these di®erent cognitive styles (FD and FI) were re°ected by di®erences in ERP activity (Goode et al, 2002), they found that the P300 amplitudes were higher in the FD group in a high-memory load condition and indicated that FD subjects must change their usually global percept.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The frontopolar positivity that occurs between 280 and 400 ms after stimulus onset could be regarded as the P300 ERP component, which is related to attention and it is maximal over the central-parietal region (Polich, 2007). Meng et al (2012) studied the relation of the ERP components and the FDI cognitive styles through a different experimental scheme. More specifically, participants in their experiment performed a stimulus matching task by categorizing two sequentially presented figures as a match (same shape) or as a conflict (different shape).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%