Event-related potentials elicited during a visual Go-Nogo task in adults with phenylketonuria
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] S. Hillyard,et al. Event-related brain potentials in the study of visual selective attention. , 1998, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[2] S J Luck,et al. Visual event-related potentials index focused attention within bilateral stimulus arrays. II. Functional dissociation of P1 and N1 components. , 1990, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.
[3] H. Bokura,et al. Electrophysiological correlates for response inhibition in a Go/NoGo task , 2001, Clinical Neurophysiology.
[4] E. Schröger,et al. The location of preceding stimuli affects selective processing in a sustained attention situation. , 1995, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.
[5] M Eimer,et al. Attending to quadrants and ring-shaped regions: ERP effects of visual attention in different spatial selection tasks. , 1999, Psychophysiology.
[6] S. Channon,et al. Executive functioning and speed of processing in phenylketonuria. , 2005, Neuropsychology.
[7] J. Sergeant,et al. Sustained attention and inhibition of cognitive interference in treated phenylketonuria: associations with concurrent and lifetime phenylalanine concentrations , 2002, Neuropsychologia.
[8] A. Rupp,et al. Neurological outcome in adult patients with early-treated phenylketonuria , 1998, European Journal of Pediatrics.
[9] Steven J. Luck,et al. Multiple mechanisms of visual-spatial attention: recent evidence from human electrophysiology , 1995, Behavioural Brain Research.
[10] J. Hohnsbein,et al. Action monitoring, error detection, and the basal ganglia: an ERP study , 2001, Neuroreport.
[11] B. Burton,et al. Phenylketonuria in adulthood: A collaborative study , 2002, Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease.
[12] M. Eimer. An ERP study on visual spatial priming with peripheral onsets. , 1994, Psychophysiology.
[13] L. D. de Sonneville,et al. Effect of high-dose tyrosine supplementation on brain function in adults with phenylketonuria. , 1995, The Journal of pediatrics.
[14] E. Jodo,et al. Relation of a negative ERP component to response inhibition in a Go/No-go task. , 1992, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.
[15] E. Vogel,et al. The visual N1 component as an index of a discrimination process. , 2000, Psychophysiology.
[16] S. Channon,et al. Executive functioning, memory, and learning in phenylketonuria. , 2004, Neuropsychology.
[17] A. Diamond,et al. Prefrontal cortex cognitive deficits in children treated early and continuously for PKU. , 1991, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.
[18] A. J. Bartsch,et al. Electrophysiological measurements of anterior cingulate function , 2002, Journal of Neural Transmission.
[19] Todd C. Handy,et al. Attention and Sensory Gain Control: A Peripheral Visual Process? , 2005, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[20] A. Rupp,et al. Sustained attention in adult phenylketonuria: the influence of the concurrent phenylalanine-blood-level. , 1994, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.
[21] J. Hohnsbein,et al. ERP components in Go/Nogo tasks and their relation to inhibition. , 1999, Acta psychologica.
[22] J. Denecke,et al. Frontal lobe-dependent functions in treated phenylketonuria: Blood phenylalanine concentrations and long-term deficits in adolescents young adults , 2005, Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease.
[23] K. R. Ridderinkhof,et al. Electrophysiological correlates of anterior cingulate function in a go/no-go task: Effects of response conflict and trial type frequency , 2003, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.
[24] Hans-Jochen Heinze,et al. Localizing visual discrimination processes in time and space. , 2002, Journal of neurophysiology.