All Stories

  1. The detection of higher-order acoustic transitions is reflected in the N1 ERP
  2. Emotion lies in the eye of the listener: emotional arousal to novel sounds is reflected in the sympathetic contribution to the pupil dilation response and the P3
  3. Attentional gain is modulated by probabilistic feature expectations in a spatial cueing task: ERP evidence
  4. Audio-visual synchrony and spatial attention enhance processing of dynamic visual stimulation independently and in parallel: A frequency-tagging study
  5. The digitization of the Wundt estate at Leipzig University.
  6. How regularity representations of short sound patterns that are based on relative or absolute pitch information establish over time: An EEG study
  7. Interrelation of attention and prediction in visual processing: Effects of task-relevance and stimulus probability
  8. Positive emotion impedes emotional but not cognitive conflict processing
  9. Brain activity from stimuli that are not perceived: Visual mismatch negativity during binocular rivalry suppression
  10. Perceptual integration of faces and voices depends on the interaction of emotional content and spatial frequency
  11. Distraction by Novel and Pitch-Deviant Sounds in Children
  12. The Feedback-related Negativity Codes Components of Abstract Inference during Reward-based Decision-making
  13. Cross-modal distractors modulate oscillatory alpha power: the neural basis of impaired task performance
  14. Das Leipziger Projekt zur Erschließung und Digitalisierung des Nachlasses von Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt
  15. Sensory suppression of brain responses to self-generated sounds is observed with and without the perception of agency
  16. High-pass filters and baseline correction in M/EEG analysis-continued discussion
  17. High-pass filters and baseline correction in M/EEG analysis. Commentary on: “How inappropriate high-pass filters can produce artefacts and incorrect conclusions in ERP studies of language and cognition”
  18. Implicit expectations influence target detection in children and adults
  19. Bridging prediction and attention in current research on perception and action
  20. Effects of explicit knowledge and predictability on auditory distraction and target performance
  21. Spatial auditory regularity encoding and prediction: Human middle-latency and long-latency auditory evoked potentials
  22. Auditory perceptual objects as generative models: Setting the stage for communication by sound
  23. Digital filter design for electrophysiological data – a practical approach
  24. The effects of selective attention and speech acoustics on neural speech-tracking in a multi-talker scene
  25. Acoustic Detail Guides Attention Allocation in a Selective Listening Task
  26. Emotion and goal-directed behavior: ERP evidence on cognitive and emotional conflict
  27. Selective Attention Modulates Early Human Evoked Potentials during Emotional Face–Voice Processing
  28. Attention and prediction in human audition: a lesson from cognitive psychophysiology
  29. Separate and concurrent symbolic predictions of sound features are processed differently
  30. The role of emotion in dynamic audiovisual integration of faces and voices
  31. Microsaccadic Responses Indicate Fast Categorization of Sounds: A Novel Approach to Study Auditory Cognition
  32. Motor Intention Determines Sensory Attenuation of Brain Responses to Self-initiated Sounds
  33. Timing matters: the processing of pitch relations
  34. On the development of auditory distraction: A review
  35. Attention effects on auditory scene analysis: insights from event-related brain potentials
  36. Sensation of agency and perception of temporal order
  37. Sensorial suppression of self-generated sounds and its dependence on attention
  38. Predictive Regularity Representations in Violation Detection and Auditory Stream Segregation: From Conceptual to Computational Models
  39. Temporal regularity facilitates higher-order sensory predictions in fast auditory sequences
  40. Cerebellar contribution to the prediction of self-initiated sounds
  41. Foreground-background discrimination indicated by event-related brain potentials in a new auditory multistability paradigm
  42. The dissociation between the P3a event-related potential and behavioral distraction
  43. Differences in evoked potentials during the active processing of sound location and motion
  44. Discrimination of personally significant from nonsignificant sounds: A training study
  45. Hearing Silences: Human Auditory Processing Relies on Preactivation of Sound-Specific Brain Activity Patterns
  46. Early visual and auditory processing rely on modality-specific attentional resources
  47. Prediction errors in self- and externally-generated deviants
  48. Sensory suppression effects to self-initiated sounds reflect the attenuation of the unspecific N1 component of the auditory ERP
  49. The Human Brain Maintains Contradictory and Redundant Auditory Sensory Predictions
  50. The N1-suppression effect for self-initiated sounds is independent of attention
  51. Age dependent changes of distractibility and reorienting of attention revisited: An event-related potential study
  52. I know what is missing here: electrophysiological prediction error signals elicited by omissions of predicted ”what” but not ”when”
  53. Involuntary attentional capture by speech and non-speech deviations: A combined behavioral–event-related potential study
  54. Object-related regularities are processed automatically: evidence from the visual mismatch negativity
  55. Processing of complex distracting sounds in school-aged children and adults: evidence from EEG and MEG data
  56. Using a staircase procedure for the objective measurement of auditory stream integration and segregation thresholds
  57. Impact of lower- vs. upper-hemifield presentation on automatic colour-deviance detection: A visual mismatch negativity study
  58. Auditory event-related potentials reflect dedicated change detection activity for higher-order acoustic transitions
  59. Age-related changes in the use of regular patterns for auditory scene analysis
  60. Which kind of transition is important for sound representation? An event-related potential study
  61. Spectrotemporal processing drives fast access to memory traces for spoken words
  62. Familiarity of environmental sounds is used to establish auditory rules
  63. Finding the right control: The mismatch negativity under investigation
  64. The Cerebellum Generates Motor-to-Auditory Predictions: ERP Lesion Evidence
  65. Introductory notes on “Predictive information processing in the brain: Principles, neural mechanisms, and models”
  66. Early electrophysiological indicators for predictive processing in audition: A review
  67. Temporal aspects of prediction in audition: Cortical and subcortical neural mechanisms
  68. The processing of concurrent sounds based on inharmonicity and asynchronous onsets: An object-related negativity (ORN) study
  69. Regularity Extraction from Non-Adjacent Sounds
  70. Electrophysiological evidence for age effects on sensory memory processing of tonal patterns.
  71. Distraction and facilitation—two faces of the same coin?
  72. Filter Effects and Filter Artifacts in the Analysis of Electrophysiological Data
  73. Mapping Symbols to Sounds: Electrophysiological Correlates of the Impaired Reading Process in Dyslexia
  74. Bericht des Fachkollegiums Psychologie der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) und der DFG-Geschäftsstelle Psychologie
  75. Visual mismatch negativity and its importance in visual cognitive sciences
  76. Unintentional Temporal Context-Based Prediction of Emotional Faces: An Electrophysiological Study
  77. Maturation of obligatory auditory responses and their neural sources: Evidence from EEG and MEG
  78. The representation of unattended, segmented sounds: A mismatch negativity (MMN) study
  79. On the Role of Attention in Binocular Rivalry: Electrophysiological Evidence
  80. Syntactic and auditory spatial processing in the human temporal cortex: An MEG study
  81. Preventing distraction: Assessing stimulus-specific and general effects of the predictive cueing of deviant auditory events
  82. Selective suppression of self-initiated sounds in an auditory stream: An ERP study
  83. An Asymmetry in the Automatic Detection of the Presence or Absence of a Frequency Modulation within a Tone: A Mismatch Negativity Study
  84. Processing of novel identifiability and duration in children and adults
  85. Localizing sensory and cognitive systems for pre-attentive visual deviance detection: An sLORETA analysis of the data of Kimura et al. (2009)
  86. The modulation of auditory novelty processing by working memory load in school age children and adults: a combined behavioral and event-related potential study
  87. Asymmetries in the time course of distraction elicited by changes in the auditory and visual modalities
  88. Attentional focus and behavioral relevance affect auditory memory representation of sequentially presented sounds
  89. Prediction-based auditory responses to omissions of self-generated sounds
  90. Resolving inconsistencies between different cases for predictive modelling in audition
  91. Top-down attention affects sequential regularity representation in the human visual system
  92. Neuregelung zu Publikationsverzeichnissen bei DFG-Anträgen: Stellungnahme des DFG-Fachkollegiums Psychologie
  93. Behavioral and evoked potential measures of distraction in 5-year-old children born preterm
  94. Visual Object Representations Can Be Formed outside the Focus of Voluntary Attention: Evidence from Event-related Brain Potentials
  95. Human Visual System Automatically Encodes Sequential Regularities of Discrete Events
  96. The time-course of auditory and visual distraction effects in a new crossmodal paradigm
  97. Is My Mobile Ringing? Evidence for Rapid Processing of a Personally Significant Sound in Humans
  98. A temporal constraint for automatic deviance detection and object formation: A mismatch negativity study
  99. Omission mismatch negativity builds up late
  100. Differences in processing violations of sequential and feature regularities as revealed by visual event-related brain potentials
  101. The effects of response sharing and stimulus presentation frequency on event-related potentials in an auditory oddball paradigm
  102. Development of Bilingual Phonological Awareness in Spanish-Speaking English Language Learners: The Roles of Vocabulary, Letter Knowledge, and Prior Phonological Awareness
  103. Hemispheric specialization during discrimination of sound sources reflected by MMN
  104. Top-down modulation of auditory processing: effects of sound context, musical expertise and attentional focus
  105. The utility of brief, spectrally rich, dynamic sounds in the passive oddball paradigm
  106. I Heard That Coming: Event-Related Potential Evidence for Stimulus-Driven Prediction in the Auditory System
  107. Distraction in a visual multi-deviant paradigm: Behavioral and event-related potential effects
  108. Familiarity affects environmental sound processing outside the focus of attention: An event-related potential study
  109. The cognitive control of distraction by novelty in children aged 7-8 and adults
  110. Attenuated human auditory middle latency response and evoked 40-Hz response to self-initiated sounds
  111. Disentangling effects of auditory distraction and of stimulus-response sequence
  112. Effects of intermodal attention on the auditory steady-state response and the event-related potential
  113. Visual mismatch negativity: New evidence from the equiprobable paradigm
  114. Violation of Expectation: Neural Correlates Reflect Bases of Prediction
  115. Neural mechanisms of intermodal sustained selective attention with concurrently presented auditory and visual stimuli
  116. Predictive power of the auditory system
  117. Suppression of the auditory N1 event-related potential component with unpredictable self-initiated tones: Evidence for internal forward models with dynamic stimulation
  118. Early correlates of visual awareness following orientation and colour rivalry
  119. Specific or general? The nature of attention set changes triggered by distracting auditory events
  120. Memory trace formation for abstract auditory features and its consequences in different attentional contexts
  121. Rapid extraction of auditory feature contingencies
  122. Optimizing the auditory distraction paradigm: Behavioral and event-related potential effects in a lateralized multi-deviant approach
  123. Early correlates of visual awareness in the human brain: Time and place from event-related brain potentials
  124. Primary motor area contribution to attentional reorienting after distraction
  125. Modulation of the mismatch negativity (MMN) to vowel duration changes in native speakers of Finnish and German as a result of language experience
  126. Processing of Abstract Rule Violations in Audition
  127. Automatic detection of lexical change: an auditory event-related potential study
  128. Attentional resources and pop-out detection in search displays
  129. Regularity Extraction and Application in Dynamic Auditory Stimulus Sequences
  130. MMN or no MMN: No magnitude of deviance effect on the MMN amplitude
  131. Evidence for the auditory P3a reflecting an automatic process: Elicitation during highly-focused continuous visual attention
  132. Localizing pre-attentive auditory memory-based comparison: Magnetic mismatch negativity to pitch change
  133. Personal significance is encoded automatically by the human brain: an event-related potential study with ringtones
  134. Cognitive control of involuntary attention and distraction in children and adolescents
  135. Differential processing of terminal tone parts within structured and non-structured tones
  136. Modulation of involuntary attention by the duration of novel and pitch deviant sounds in children and adolescents
  137. Mismatch negativity on the cone of confusion
  138. Perceptual and cognitive task difficulty has differential effects on auditory distraction
  139. Temporal grouping affects the automatic processing of deviant sounds
  140. Binding Symbols and Sounds: Evidence from Event-Related Oscillatory Gamma-Band Activity
  141. Mismatch Negativity
  142. The mismatch negativity in cognitive and clinical neuroscience: Theoretical and methodological considerations
  143. The development of involuntary and voluntary attention from childhood to adulthood: A combined behavioral and event-related potential study
  144. From Air Oscillations to Music and Speech: Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Evidence for Fine-Tuned Neural Networks in Audition
  145. Mechanisms for detecting auditory temporal and spectral deviations operate over similar time windows but are divided differently between the two hemispheres
  146. Synchronized brain activity during rehearsal and short-term memory disruption by irrelevant speech is affected by recall mode
  147. Selective tuning of cortical sound-feature processing by language experience
  148. Two separate mechanisms underlie auditory change detection and involuntary control of attention
  149. Visual distraction: a behavioral and event-related brain potential study in humans
  150. The Relation Between Onset, Offset, and Duration Perception as Examined by Psychophysical Data and Event-Related Brain Potentials
  151. Different Interference Effects in Musicians and a Control Group
  152. Part III: Mental Representations of Music--Combining Behavioral and Neuroscience Tools. Introduction
  153. Pre-attentive and attentive processing of temporal and frequency characteristics within long sounds
  154. Familiarity Affects the Processing of Task-irrelevant Auditory Deviance
  155. Auditory streaming affects the processing of successive deviant and standard sounds
  156. Human auditory event-related potentials predict duration judgments
  157. Diagnostic subgroups of developmental dyslexia have different deficits in neural processing of tones and phonemes
  158. Response repetition vs. response change modulates behavioral and electrophysiological effects of distraction
  159. Deviance-repetition effects as a function of stimulus feature, feature value variation, and timing: a mismatch negativity study
  160. Sensory and cognitive mechanisms for preattentive change detection in auditory cortex
  161. Pitch discrimination accuracy in musicians vs nonmusicians: an event-related potential and behavioral study
  162. Binocular rivalry is partly resolved at early processing stages with steady and with flickering presentation: a human event-related brain potential study
  163. Texture segmentation and visual search for pop-out targets
  164. From symbols to sounds: Visual symbolic information activates sound representations
  165. Pre-attentive categorization of vowel formant structure in complex tones
  166. Pre-attentive perception of vowel phonemes from variable speech stimuli
  167. Psychophysics Beyond Sensation
  168. Distraction effects in vision: behavioral and event-related potential indices
  169. Differential processing of duration changes within short and long sounds in humans
  170. Pre-attentive auditory processing of lexicality
  171. Input to Verbal Working Memory
  172. Bottom-Up Influences on Working Memory: Behavioral and Electrophysiological Distraction Varies with Distractor Strength
  173. Neural networks engaged in short-term memory rehearsal are disrupted by irrelevant speech in human subjects
  174. Processing Tonal Modulations: An ERP Study
  175. Preattentive Memory-Based Comparison of Sound Intensity
  176. Die Bedeutung sensorischer Verarbeitung und Aufmerksamkeitssteuerung für Arbeitsgedächtnisfunktionen
  177. Prefrontal cortex involvement in preattentive auditory deviance detection:
  178. Auditory distraction by duration and location deviants: a behavioral and event-related potential study
  179. Mismatch negativity to pitch change: varied stimulus proportions in controlling effects of neural refractoriness on human auditory event-related brain potentials
  180. Measuring duration mismatch negativity
  181. Working memory controls involuntary attention switching: evidence from an auditory distraction paradigm
  182. Auditory distraction with different presentation rates: an event-related potential and behavioral study
  183. Visual marking for search: behavioral and event-related potential analyses
  184. Synthesis of novel amphiphilic copolymers by acid-mediated free-radical polymerization and solution as well as particle stabilization properties
  185. Differential Contribution of Frontal and Temporal Cortices to Auditory Change Detection: fMRI and ERP Results
  186. Music matters: Preattentive musicality of the human brain
  187. Brain activity index of distractibility in normal school-age children
  188. Superior Formation of Cortical Memory Traces for Melodic Patterns in Musicians
  189. Is there pre-attentive memory-based comparison of pitch?
  190. Automaticity and attention: investigating automatic processing in texture segmentation with event-related brain potentials
  191. Processing Spatial and Temporal Discontinuities: Electrophysiological Indicators
  192. The Role of Large-Scale Memory Organization in the Mismatch Negativity Event-Related Brain Potential
  193. A comparison of auditory and visual distraction effects: behavioral and event-related indices
  194. Activation of the auditory pre-attentive change detection system by tone repetitions with fast stimulation rate
  195. Alternative perceptual states ‘apparent motion’ and ‘perceived simultaneity’ lead to differences of induced EEG rhythms
  196. Auditory distraction: event-related potential and behavioral indices
  197. Effects of spectral complexity and sound duration on automatic complex-sound pitch processing in humans – a mismatch negativity study
  198. Superior pre-attentive auditory processing in musicians
  199. Electrophysiological indices of acute effects of ethanol on involuntary attention shifting
  200. Speeded responses to audiovisual signal changes result from bimodal integration
  201. Behavioral and electrophysiological effects of task-irrelevant sound change: a new distraction paradigm
  202. ERP effects of intermodal attention and cross-modal links in spatial attention
  203. Preattentive processing of auditory spatial information in humans
  204. Human event-related brain potentials to auditory periodic noise stimuli
  205. Fast preattentive processing of location: a functional basis for selective listening in humans
  206. On the detection of auditory deviations: A pre-attentive activation model
  207. Pre-attentive processing of spectrally complex sounds with asynchronous onsets: an event-related potential study with human subjects
  208. Response from Schröger
  209. Auditory distraction elicited by sound change
  210. The influence of stimulus intensity and inter-stimulus interval on the detection of pitch and loudness changes
  211. Preattentive periodicity detection in auditory patterns as governed by time and intensity information
  212. Spiritual and Coping Needs of Critically III Patients
  213. Interaural time and level differences: integrated or separated processing?
  214. Chapter 5 Involuntary attention
  215. Effects of lateralized cues on the processing of lateralized auditory stimuli
  216. Time course of loudness in tone patterns is automatically represented by the human brain
  217. Presentation rate and magnitude of stimulus deviance effects on human pre-attentive change detection
  218. Neural representation for the temporal structure of sound patterns
  219. The location of preceding stimuli affects selective processing in a sustained attention situation
  220. Processing of auditory deviants with changes in one versus two stimulus dimensions
  221. Human brain potential signs of selection by location and frequency in an auditory transient attention situation
  222. An event-related potential study of sensory representations of unfamiliar tonal patterns
  223. Mismatch negativity to changes in a continuous tone with regularly varying frequencies
  224. Event-related potentials to auditory stimuli following transient shifts of spatial attention in a Go/Nogo task
  225. Probability Distributions of Minkowski Distances between Discrete Random Variables
  226. Representation of abstract attributes of auditory stimuli in the human brain
  227. Event-related potentials reveal how non-attended complex sound patterns are represented by the human brain