All Stories

  1. Perceived language competence modulates criteria for speech error processing: evidence from event-related potentials
  2. Fatigue
  3. Face and emotion expression processing and the serotonin transporter polymorphism 5-HTTLPR/rs22531
  4. Test battery for measuring the perception and recognition of facial expressions of emotion
  5. Should I smile or should I frown? An ERP study on the voluntary control of emotion‐related facial expressions
  6. Can Training Enhance Face Cognition Abilities in Middle-Aged Adults?
  7. Differential Task Effects on N400 and P600 Elicited by Semantic and Syntactic Violations
  8. Modulation of the N170 adaptation profile by higher level factors
  9. Recognizing dynamic facial expressions of emotion: Specificity and intensity effects in event-related brain potentials
  10. Facial EMG Responses to Emotional Expressions Are Related to Emotion Perception Ability
  11. Face Perception
  12. Neurocognitive mechanisms of individual differences in face cognition: A replication and extension
  13. Oculomotor Control, Brain Potentials, and Timelines of Word Recognition During Natural Reading
  14. Psychometric challenges and proposed solutions when scoring facial emotion expression codes
  15. Classification of dynamic facial expressions of emotion presented briefly
  16. The Influence of Dimensional Overlap on Location-Related Priming in the Simon Task
  17. Can Minor Changes in the Environment Lower Accident Risk at Level Crossings? Results from a Driving Simulator-Based Paradigm
  18. How about Lunch? Consequences of the Meal Context on Cognition and Emotion
  19. Declarative memory consolidation during the first night in a sleep lab: The role of REM sleep and cortisol
  20. Interplay of emotional valence and concreteness in word processing: An event-related potential study with verbs
  21. Face and object cognition across adult age.
  22. Neuronal response specificity as a marker of reading proficiency
  23. Overcoming limitations of the ERP method with Residue Iteration Decomposition (RIDE): A demonstration in go/no‐go experiments
  24. Sex differences in face cognition
  25. Independence of Valence and Reward in Emotional Word Processing: Electrophysiological Evidence
  26. A model of microsaccade-related neural responses induced by short-term depression in thalamocortical synapses
  27. Get out of here, quick! Problems with transparent labels on glass doors.
  28. The influence of emotional words on sentence processing: Electrophysiological and behavioral evidence
  29. Separating stimulus‐driven and response‐related LRP components with Residue Iteration Decomposition (RIDE)
  30. Emotion Effects on the N170: A Question of Reference?
  31. The sacred and the absurd––an electrophysiological study of counterintuitive ideas (at sentence level)
  32. Trans-saccadic parafoveal preview benefits in fluent reading: A study with fixation-related brain potentials
  33. Implicit word learning benefits from semantic richness: Electrophysiological and behavioral evidence.
  34. Measuring the speed of recognising facially expressed emotions
  35. Foreshadowing of Performance Accuracy by Event-Related Potentials: Evidence from a Minimal-Conflict Task
  36. P1 and beyond: Functional separation of multiple emotion effects in word recognition
  37. Font Size Matters—Emotion and Attention in Cortical Responses to Written Words
  38. Depth of Conceptual Knowledge Modulates Visual Processes during Word Reading
  39. Does processing of emotional facial expressions depend on intention? Time-resolved evidence from event-related brain potentials
  40. How the Emotional Content of Discourse Affects Language Comprehension
  41. Neural mechanisms of timing control in a coincident timing task
  42. The time course of semantic richness effects in visual word recognition
  43. Cognitive neuroscience of motor learning and motor control
  44. Does silent reading speed in normal adult readers depend on early visual processes? Evidence from event-related brain potentials
  45. Association with positive outcome induces early effects in event-related brain potentials
  46. Order Patterns Networks (ORPAN)—a method to estimate time-evolving functional connectivity from multivariate time series
  47. Effects of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on behaviour and electrophysiology of language production
  48. Aiming for the bull's eye: Preparing for throwing investigated with event‐related brain potentials
  49. Grouping mechanisms in response preparation investigated with event‐related brain potentials
  50. Knowledge scale effects in face recognition: An electrophysiological investigation
  51. Automaticity in attractive face processing
  52. Toward an ERP-Driven Diagnostic Approach for Reading Impairments
  53. On the automaticity of emotion processing in words and faces: Event-related brain potentials evidence from a superficial task
  54. Eye movements and brain electric potentials during reading
  55. Residue iteration decomposition (RIDE): A new method to separate ERP components on the basis of latency variability in single trials
  56. Are effects of emotion in single words non-lexical? Evidence from event-related brain potentials
  57. Functional network analysis reveals differences in the semantic priming task
  58. Emotional words impact the mind but not the body: Evidence from pupillary responses
  59. The influence of emotions due to verbal admonishment and encouragement on performance monitoring
  60. Multiple contributions to priming effects for familiar faces: Analyses with backward masking and event‐related potentials
  61. Functional network analysis reveals differences in the semantic priming task
  62. Electrophysiological correlates of perceiving and evaluating static and dynamic facial emotional expressions
  63. Individual differences in emotion recognition and face cognition
  64. Individual differences in emotion recognition and face cognition
  65. Microsaccades and EEG alpha oscillations: a close relationship?
  66. Differential dynamics of spatial and non-spatial stimulus-response compatibility effects: A dual task LRP study
  67. On the specificity of face cognition compared with general cognitive functioning across adult age.
  68. Reading emotional words within sentences: The impact of arousal and valence on event-related potentials
  69. Speed effects of deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's disease
  70. Effects of previous experience and associated knowledge on retrieval processes of faces: An ERP investigation of newly learned faces
  71. Processing Interrogative Sentence Mood at the Semantic-Syntactic Interface: An Electrophysiological Research in Chinese, German, and Polish
  72. Automaticity of processing facial expressions — Introduction and overview
  73. Emotions in cognitive conflicts are not aversive but are task specific
  74. Automaticity of emotional face processing as revealed by task independence
  75. Testinformation
  76. How Is Sentence Processing Affected by External Semantic and Syntactic Information? Evidence from Event-Related Potentials
  77. Individual Differences in Face Cognition: Brain–Behavior Relationships
  78. Structural invariance and age-related performance differences in face cognition.
  79. The impact of intervening tasks on response preparation.
  80. Individual differences in perceiving and recognizing faces—One element of social cognition.
  81. Rules and Heuristics during Sentence Comprehension: Evidence from a Dual-task Brain Potential Study
  82. Electrophysiological evidence for the effect of prior probability on response preparation
  83. Information transmission for one-dimensional stimuli: The role of strategies
  84. Microsaccadic inhibition and P300 enhancement in a visual oddball task
  85. Emotions in word and face processing: Early and late cortical responses
  86. Effects of inter-stimulus interval on skin conductance responses and event-related potentials in a Go/NoGo task
  87. Conflicts as signals: bridging the gap between conflict detection and cognitive control
  88. Seeing what we know and understand: How knowledge shapes perception
  89. Face Memory: A Cognitive and Psychophysiological Approach to the Assessment of Antecedents of Emotional Intelligence
  90. Emotions in Go/NoGo conflicts
  91. Toward a comprehensive test battery for face cognition: Assessment of the tasks
  92. Is lexical access autonomous? Evidence from combining overlapping tasks with recording event-related brain potentials
  93. The appraisal of facial beauty is rapid but not mandatory
  94. Interaction of facial expressions and familiarity: ERP evidence
  95. Overlapping Tasks Methodology as a Tool for Investigating Language Perception
  96. Dissociation of Perceptual and Response-Related Grouping Effects in a Precue Task by Means of Event-Related Brain Potentials
  97. Spatial Interference Depends on Processing Resources: Combining the PRP Paradigm With Event-Related Brain Potentials
  98. Facial attractiveness modulates early and late event-related brain potentials
  99. Localizing practice effects in dual-task performance
  100. MEG/EEG sources of the 170-ms response to faces are co-localized in the fusiform gyrus
  101. Does the error negativity reflect response conflict strength? Evidence from a Simon task
  102. Memory‐related ERP components for experimentally learned faces and names: Characteristics and parallel‐test reliabilities
  103. Individual Differences in Face Processing: Behavioral and Psychophysiological Indicators
  104. Rules, Heuristics, and Language Working Memory During Sentence Processing
  105. Memory systems for structural and semantic knowledge of faces and buildings
  106. Semantics prevalence over syntax during sentence processing: A brain potential study of noun–adjective agreement in Spanish
  107. Dissociating perceptual and representation-based contributions to priming of face recognition
  108. Semantic processing of unattended meaning is modulated by additional task load: Evidence from electrophysiology
  109. Neural correlates of intentional and incidental recognition of famous faces
  110. Priming emotional facial expressions as evidenced by event-related brain potentials
  111. ERP components reflecting stimulus identification: contrasting the recognition potential and the early repetition effect (N250r)
  112. Correlates of implicit memory for words and faces in event-related brain potentials
  113. Time pressure effects on information processing in overlapping tasks: evidence from the lateralized readiness potential
  114. Face repetition effects in direct and indirect tasks: an event-related brain potentials study
  115. I recognize your face, but I can't remember your name: A question of expertise?
  116. Is word perception in a second language more vulnerable than in one’s native language? Evidence from brain potentials in a dual task setting☆☆☆
  117. What's special about personally familiar faces? A multimodal approach
  118. The functional locus of the lateralized readiness potential
  119. Preparing for Action: Inferences from CNV and LRP
  120. Effects of Additional Tasks on Language Perception: An Event-Related Brain Potential Investigation.
  121. Does phonological encoding in speech production always follow the retrieval of semantic knowledge?
  122. Are fingers special? Evidence about movement preparation from event–related brain potentials
  123. The effect of intentional expectancy on mental processing: a chronopsychophysiological investigation
  124. Functional localization and mechanisms of sequential effects in serial reaction time tasks
  125. Age-related slowing in face and name recognition: Evidence from event-related brain potentials.
  126. Control over location-based response activation in the Simon task: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence.
  127. Brain-potential evidence for the time course of access to biographical facts and names of familiar persons.
  128. Sequence‐sensitive subcomponents of P300: Topographical analyses and dipole source localization
  129. Multiple bottlenecks in information processing? An electrophysiological examination
  130. Time pressure effects in overlapping tasks: An LRP investigation
  131. ERP correlates of error processing in spatial S-R compatibility tasks1Portions of the results were presented at the 20th meeting of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychophysiologie und ihre Anwendung, Hamburg, Germany, June 1992, and at the 33rd Annual ...
  132. Covert signs of expectancy in serial reaction time tasks revealed by event-related potentials
  133. Motor programming of response force and movement direction
  134. Postperceptual effects and P300 latency
  135. Specificity of Face Recognition: Recognition of Exemplars of Non-Face Objects In Prosopagnosia
  136. The phonological loop model of working memory: An ERP study of irrelevant speech and phonological similarity effects
  137. Differential localization of brain systems subserving memory for names and faces in normal subjects with event-related potentials
  138. Covert Face Recognition in Prosopagnosia: A Dissociable Function?
  139. Repetition priming and associative priming of face recognition: Evidence from event-related potentials.
  140. The lateralized readiness potential preceding brief isometric force pulses of different peak force and rate of force production
  141. Event-related potentials and models of performance asymmetries in face and word recognition
  142. Stimulus presentation rate dissociates sequential effects in event‐related potentials and reaction times
  143. Operant conditioning of P300
  144. Differential effects of voluntary expectancies on reaction times and event-related potentials: Evidence for automatic and controlled expectancies.
  145. Human brain potential correlates of face encoding into memory
  146. Contributions of stimulus encoding and memory search to right hemisphere superiority in face recognition: Behavioural and electrophysiological evidence
  147. Awareness of P300‐Related Cognitive Processes: A Signal Detection Approach
  148. Consciousness of attention and expectancy as reflected in event-related potentials and reaction times.
  149. Selective attention differentially affects brainstem auditory evoked potentials of electrodermal responders and nonresponders
  150. The Effects of Serial Order in Long Sequences of Auditory Stimuli on Event‐Related Potentials
  151. Projection of Color Coding Retinal Neurons in Urodele Amphibians