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RECENT PUBLICATIONS
Smith, M. E. & Gevins, A. (2004). Attention
and brain activity while watching television: Components of viewer
engagement. Media Psychology, 6(3), 285-305.
ABSTRACT
Television commercials include elements designed
to engage the viewers attention. Manipulations of the commercials
visual structure that result in rapid pacing or frequent scene changes
can be engaging because they require a frequent redirection of visual
attention. Manipulations of semantic content through such techniques
as the inclusion of humorous or anomalous elements can elicit cognitive
engagement. Structural manipulations in videos are known to attenuate
the alpha (8 to 13 Hz) rhythm of the electroencephalogram (EEG)
recorded over posterior cortical regions involved with visual processes.
To examine whether other engaging elements also affect the alpha
rhythm, EEG was recorded from 10 participants who viewed television
commercials. Principal components analysis was used to decompose
the alpha rhythm into underlying factors that varied in spatial
topography over the head and in spectral composition. Across commercials,
the power of a posterior-distributed alpha component was inversely
correlated with the frequency of scene changes. In contrast, a frontal
component in the lower frequency portion of the alpha band was attenuated
during commercials that elicited high subjective interest, independent
of scene change frequency. And, an upper-frequency frontal alpha
component was attenuated during commercials for which the item being
advertised had a high probability of being subsequently recalled,
independent of other factors. These frontal patterns of alpha reactivity
are consistent with other neuroimaging results concerning frontal
lobe activation by executive processes and episodic memory encoding.
With appropriate neurologically guided analysis, EEG signals can
provide a unique means of monitoring both perceptual and higher
order neurocognitive processes during television viewing.
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