Event-related potentials (ERPs) and behavioral responsiveness
were investigated during the transition from wakefulness to
sleep. Ten participants were presented with an auditory oddball
task during repeated sleep onset periods. The EEG was recorded
from 29 different scalp sites. A 1500-Hz tone pip was presented
infrequently (p = .04) within a series of lower pitch
1000-Hz “standard” stimuli (p = .96).
Participants were required to button press upon detection of
the rare “target” stimulus. During wakefulness,
almost all targets were detected. A large amplitude P300 was
observed to these detected targets. This P300 was maximum over
parietal areas of the scalp. During stage 1 sleep, subjects
continued to respond on 47% of trials. The parietal P300 amplitude
remained large to these detected targets. It was, however, much
attenuated at frontal sites. When the participant failed to
detect the target in either stage 1 or 2, no P300 was visible.
P300 is thus associated with behavioral detection of the target
stimulus, whether in wakefulness or stage 1 “sleep.”
Trials were also sorted by reaction time (RT), in which bins
1–3 represented increasingly long RT. In the waking state,
P300 amplitude did not significantly vary across the different
bins. Although mean RT latency varied by 512 ms from bin 1 to
bin 3, P300 latency varied by only 25 ms. Differences in RT
are thus probably due to response-related processes rather than
stimulus classification time.