Brain event-related potentials to complex tones in depressed patients: relations to perceptual asymmetry and clinical features

G.E. Brudera, C.E. Tenkea, J.W. Stewartb, J.P. Toweya, P. Leitea, M. Voglmaiera, F.M. Quitkinb

a Department of Biopsychology, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY, USA 
b Depression Evaluation Service, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY, USA

Received 1 March 1994; accepted 18 October 1994.

Abstract

Brain event-related potentials (ERPs) to probe tones in a dichotic complex tone test were recorded from right-handed depressed patients (n = 44) and normal subjects (n = 19) at homologous sites over left and right hemispheres (F3, F4; C3, C4; P3, P4; O1, O2). There were no differences between groups N1 or P2 amplitude, but patients had smaller P3 amplitude than did normal subjects. Depressed patients failed to show either the left ear advantage or behavior-related hemispheric asymmetry of P3 seen for normal subjects. Depressed patients also showed less difference in hemispheric asymmetry between same and different judgments. These findings indicate that the abnormal behavioral asymmetry for dichotic pitch discrimination in depressed patients reflects a reduction in hemispheric asymmetry and is related to relatively late stages of cognitive processing.

Descriptors: Depressive disorders, Event-related potentials, P300 (P3b), Dichotic listening, Laterality, Pitch discrimination