Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded during
a go/no-go reaction time (RT) task in which subjects responded
to rare target tones and withheld response to frequent
tones. In a predictable condition, a rare visual stimulus
signalled the impending occurrence of a rare tone, whereas
a frequent visual stimulus signalled that a frequent tone
would be presented. The rare visual stimuli elicited P3,
associated with violations of expectations, whereas the
rare tones, being predictable, did not. The rare tones
elicited the mismatch negativity (MMN), a component associated
with preattentive deviance detection, despite the fact
that they were expected. RT was faster in the predictable
condition than in another condition in which the tones
were not predictable. The P3 and RT data indicate, respectively,
that subjects anticipated and were ready to respond to
the target tones. The MMN result indicates that immediately
before target tones, the preattentive system underlying
the MMN was set for frequent tones, being unaffected by
the information available to the higher order system. Thus,
the higher order cognitive system associated with P3 and
the lower order cognitive system associated with the MMN
were prepared simultaneously for opposite events.