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Habituation of Brain Activity with Repetition in Color and Picture-Word Stroop Tests.

Senichiro KikuchiNobutaka TsutsuiYusuke NishizawaKenji TsuchiyaKaori ShimodaKazuki HiraoFumikazu Miwakeichi
Published in: Annals of biomedical engineering (2024)
As a widely used mental task for functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), the original color-word Stroop task has the advantage of being difficult to habituate, but also the disadvantage of being difficult to understand, especially for children. While the introduction of derived Stroop tasks offers highly promising countermeasures, changes in brain activity during these tests have not been well tested. We investigated the degree of habituation between the original and a derived Stroop task by measuring brain activity to obtain a better fNIRS task design. Fourteen healthy adults participated in the study, and a 10-channel fNIRS device was used. A picture-word Stroop task with lower linguistic conflict than the original was conducted. The original and derived Stroop tests were repeated four times in a 1-week interval. We found that the original Stroop test did not show any significant changes in brain activity with repeated measures; however, brain activity decreased during the derived test. The differences in habituation between the original and derived tests may be due to the differences in the strength of the linguistic conflict. Our findings also highlight the need to consider the effects of habituation when using derived Stroop tasks in repeated measures.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • clinical trial
  • working memory
  • mental health
  • mass spectrometry
  • study protocol