In this study, we examined the relationship between
the novelty P3 and the P300 components of the brain event-related
potential (ERP). Fifteen subjects responded manually to
the rare stimuli embedded either in a classical auditory
oddball series or in a series in which “novel”
stimuli were inserted. The electroencephalogram (EEG) was
recorded with a dense array of 129 electrodes. The data
were analyzed by using spatial Principal Components Analysis
(PCA) to identify a set of orthogonal scalp distributions,
“virtual electrodes” that account for the spatial
variance. The data were then expressed as ERPs measured
at each of the virtual electrodes. These ERPs were analyzed
using temporal PCA, yielding a set of “virtual epochs.”
Most of the temporal variance of the rare events was associated
with a virtual electrode with a posterior topography, that
is, with a classical P300, which was active during the
virtual epoch associated with the P300. The novel stimuli
were found to elicit both a classical P300 and a component
focused on a virtual electrode with a frontal topography.
We propose that the term Novelty P3 should be
restricted to this frontal component.