P300 differences for target (.10), nontarget (.10),
and standard tones (.80) were assessed using a three-stimulus
oddball paradigm in which participants responded only to
the target (n = 12). Target/standard (easy or
difficult) and nontarget/standard (large or small) pitch
differences were manipulated orthogonally. In all conditions,
target tones elicited a parietal P300, which was affected
only by the target/standard discrimination ease. Nontarget
in the easy/large and difficult/small conditions elicited
a parietal but smaller P300 than the target but in the
easy/small condition elicited similar ERPs to the standard.
However, nontarget stimuli in the difficult/large condition
elicited an anterior maximum and earlier P300 (P3a) component.
The findings suggest that target P300s are not influenced
by the nontarget stimulus configuration, whereas the nontarget
P300 outcomes are determined directly by the stimulus context.
The theoretical implications are discussed.