The effects of attention were assessed on novelty
P3 amplitude and scalp distribution elicited by environmental
sounds in young and elderly volunteers who participated
in either actively attended or ignored oddball conditions.
For the young, novelty P3 amplitude decreased with time
on task during both attend and ignore sequences. Amplitude
decrements were greatest at frontal sites during the attend
condition, but at all sites during the ignore condition.
A reliable amplitude decrement was not observed for the
elderly in either the attend or ignore oddball series.
The data suggest that attention differentially activates
multiple generators that contribute to scalp-recorded novelty
P3 activity. The lack of novelty P3 habituation seen in
the elderly is consistent with changes in frontal lobe
function as age increases.