Event-related brain potentials reflect traces of echoic memory in humans

[1]  I. Winkler,et al.  Event-related potentials in auditory backward recognition masking: A new way to study the neurophysiological basis of sensory memory in humans , 1992, Neuroscience Letters.

[2]  R Näätänen,et al.  Can echoic memory store two traces simultaneously? A study of event-related brain potentials. , 1992, Psychophysiology.

[3]  R. Näätänen,et al.  Intermodal selective attention. II. Effects of attentional load on processing of auditory and visual stimuli in central space. , 1992, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[4]  F. Perrin,et al.  Brain generators implicated in the processing of auditory stimulus deviance: a topographic event-related potential study. , 1990, Psychophysiology.

[5]  R. Näätänen The role of attention in auditory information processing as revealed by event-related potentials and other brain measures of cognitive function , 1990, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[6]  I. Winkler,et al.  The effect of small variation of the frequent auditory stimulus on the event-related brain potential to the infrequent stimulus. , 1990, Psychophysiology.

[7]  R Näätänen,et al.  Event-related brain potentials reflecting processing of relevant and irrelevant stimuli during selective listening. , 1989, Psychophysiology.

[8]  K. Reinikainen,et al.  Do event-related potentials reveal the mechanism of the auditory sensory memory in the human brain? , 1989, Neuroscience Letters.

[9]  I. Silver,et al.  ATP and Brain Function , 1989, Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism.

[10]  W. P. Dixon,et al.  BMPD statistical software manual , 1988 .

[11]  N. Cowan Evolving conceptions of memory storage, selective attention, and their mutual constraints within the human information-processing system. , 1988, Psychological bulletin.

[12]  R. Näätänen,et al.  The duration of a neuronal trace of an auditory stimulus as indicated by event-related potentials , 1987, Biological Psychology.

[13]  C S Watson,et al.  Stimulus-based versus performance-based measurement of auditory backward recognition masking , 1984, Perception & psychophysics.

[14]  R. Ilmoniemi,et al.  Responses of the primary auditory cortex to pitch changes in a sequence of tone pips: Neuromagnetic recordings in man , 1984, Neuroscience Letters.

[15]  N. Cowan On short and long auditory stores. , 1984, Psychological bulletin.

[16]  R. Näätänen,et al.  Short-term habituation and dishabituation of the mismatch negativity of the ERP. , 1984, Psychophysiology.

[17]  R. Näätänen,et al.  Sequential effects on the ERP in discriminating two stimuli , 1983, Biological Psychology.

[18]  D. Massaro,et al.  Recognition masking of auditory lateralization and pitch judgments. , 1976, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[19]  Risto N t nen Attention and brain function , 1992 .

[20]  Harold L. Hawkins,et al.  Auditory information processing. , 1986 .

[21]  Risto Näätänen,et al.  5 The Orienting Reflex and the N2 Deflection of the Event-Related Potential (ERP) , 1983 .