The present study assessed the effects of occlusion
duration and attention on components of the respiratory-related
evoked potential (RREP). Twenty-nine channel evoked potential
recordings were obtained from 12 young adults exposed to
a pseudorandom sequence of 100-, 200-, 400-, and 800-ms
inspiratory occlusions, under attend and ignore conditions.
Results demonstrated that the duration of an inspiratory
occlusion does not affect RREP components systematically,
highlighting the importance of the onset of the occlusion
in producing the cortical responses. Attention resulted
in augmentation of the N1, P2, and P3 components but did
not affect the early latency Nf and P1 components. P1,
N1, and P3 occurred with shorter latencies in the attend
condition. One subject with poor duration estimation ability
displayed substantially delayed P3 latency. This result
highlights the relationship between P3 and perception of
respiratory somatosensory information.