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Dive into the research topics where Robert C. Munson is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert C. Munson.


Biological Psychology | 1984

The relation of P3b to prior events and future behavior

Robert C. Munson; Daniel S. Ruchkin; Walter Ritter; Samuel Sutton; Nancy K. Squires

A prediction paradigm was used to explore the relationship of the amplitude of the scalp-recorded event-related potential to the sequence of preceding signals and to preceding and subsequent behavior. P3b was found to be the only component which related systematically to prior sequence of signals. The CNV, P300E and Slow Wave were not affected by signal sequence. The P3b findings were the same for the emitted and evoked P3b, thus ruling out a sensory interpretation of the effect of signal sequence on P3b amplitude. Furthermore, it was found that signal sequence interacts with the subjects predictions in determining P3b amplitude. For signal discontinuations, P3b was large in amplitude regardless of what had been predicted. However, for signal continuations, P3b was small when continuations had been predicted, but large when discontinuations had been predicted. Finally, we found that for both correctly and incorrectly predicted signal continuations, larger P3bs were more likely than smaller P3bs to be followed by a prediction that the signal for the next trial would be different.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 1982

Event-related potentials in a two-interval forced-choice detection task

Samuel Sutton; Daniel S. Ruchkin; Robert C. Munson; Mitchell L. Kietzman; Muriel Hammer

In an attempt to elucidate the nature of the subject’s strategy in a two-interval forcedchoice auditory detection task, event-related potentials were studied at two intensities which yielded mean accuracies of 82% and 98%. Subjects reported the observation interval in which they judged the signal to be present and the confidence of the judgment. Principal components varimax analyses yielded four components: a CZ maximal P300, a Slow Wave, a slow negative shift, and a late negative component. The P300 amplitude findings suggest that different strategies are utilized for high-confidence and low-confidence detections. At high confidence, P300 amplitude is large for the observation interval in which the signal is presented, indicating a strategy involving serial independent detection. However, the P300 latency findings at high confidence suggest that absence of the signal in the first observation interval is nonetheless noted: P300 latency in response to signal presence is shorter for the second observation interval than for the first observation interval. At low confidence, P300 is small or absent for both observation intervals, indicating a deferred decision, presumably arrived at through comparison of the two percepts.


Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting | 1986

Evidence for global processing of complex visual displays

Robert C. Munson; Richard L. Horst

“Polar graphic” displays, in which changes in system status are represented by distortions in the form of a geometric figure, were presented to subjects, and reaction time (RT) to discriminate system status was recorded. Of interest was the extent to which reaction time showed evidence of global processing of these displays as the number of nodes and difficulty of discrimination were varied. When discrimination of system status was easy, RT showed no increase with increasing number of nodes, providing evidence of global processing. When discrimination was difficult, systematic differences in RT as a function of the number of nodes suggested the invocation of other (local) processes, although the data were not consistent with a node-by-node search process.


Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting | 1984

Event-Related Potential Indices of Workload in a Single Task Paradigm

Richard L. Horst; Robert C. Munson; Daniel S. Ruchkin

Many previous studies of both behavioral and physiological correlates of cognitive workload have burdened subjects with a contrived secondary task in order to assess the workload of a primary task. The present study investigated event-related potential (ERP) indices of workload in a single task paradigm. Subjects monitored changing digital readouts for values that went “out-of-bounds.” The amplitude of a long-latency positivity in the ERPs elicited by readout changes increased with the number of readouts being monitored. This effect of workload on ERPs is reported, along with plans for additional analyses to address theoretical implications.


Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting | 1985

Processing inferences derived from event-related potential measures in a monitoring task

Richard L. Horst; Robert C. Munson; Daniel S. Ruchkin

Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from the scalp of subjects as they monitored changing digital readouts for values that went “out-of-bounds”. Workload was manipulated by varying the number of readouts that were monitored concurrently. The ERPs elicited by changes in the readouts showed long latency positivities that increased in amplitude, not only with the number of readouts monitored, but also with the number of monitored readouts that were “in danger” of going out-of-bounds. No effects were found due to the number of non-monitored readouts “in danger”. This evidence indicates that subjects (1) selectively attended to the monitored readouts and (2) processed the monitored readouts differently as the readouts approached the out-of-bounds levels to which an overt response was required.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 1992

Brain Morphology and Schizophrenia: A Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study of Limbic, Prefrontal Cortex, and Caudate Structures

Alan Breier; Robert W. Buchanan; Ahmed Elkashef; Robert C. Munson; Brian Kirkpatrick; Fouad Gellad


American Journal of Psychiatry | 1993

Structural abnormalities in deficit and nondeficit schizophrenia

Robert W. Buchanan; Alan Breier; Brian Kirkpatrick; Ahmed Elkashef; Robert C. Munson; Fouad Gellad; William T. Carpenter


Psychophysiology | 1981

P300 and Feedback Provided by Absence of the Stimulus

Daniel S. Ruchkin; Samuel Sutton; Robert C. Munson; Kenneth Silver; Franfoise Macar


Psychophysiology | 1982

P300 and Slow Wave in a Message Consisting of Two Events

Daniel S. Ruchkin; Robert C. Munson; Samuel Sutton


American Journal of Psychiatry | 1994

Basal ganglia pathology in schizophrenia and tardive dyskinesia : an MRI quantitative study

Ahmed Elkashef; Robert W. Buchanan; Fouad Gellad; Robert C. Munson; Alan Breier

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Ahmed Elkashef

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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