Preconference Workshop
Entering the Academic Market Place: A Guide For the Perplexed
Co-sponsored by the American Psychological Association (APA) and the Society
for Psychophysiological Research (SPR)
Wednesday, September 23
1:00-6:00 PM
Florentine
This workshop is intended for post-doctoral and advanced graduate students who are preparing to enter the academic job market. The workshop will examine the diverse nature of the institutions that might be seeking at any time to hire assistant professors; review the nature of the academic search process and examine the preparation of the application dossier that will increase the odds of being invited for an interview, including preparation for the interview and the all-important "job talk"; consider the negotiations that the successful candidate will be holding with the department chair; and conclude with a panel of recently hired assistant professors who will discuss their rite of passage into the community of scholars.
Chair: Emanuel Donchin
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
1:00-2:50 PM The varieties of institutional experience: An overview of
the options
Tyler Lorig1, Robert Knight2, & Emanuel Donchin3
1Washington and Lee University, 2University of California, Davis, 3University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
3:00-3:25 PM The academic search process
John Stern
Washington University
3:25-3:50 PM The job interview and the job talk: Some do's and don't's
Richard Bootzin
University of Arizona
4:00-4:50 PM So they made you an offer: Negotiating with the chair
Emanuel Donchin1 & Dell Rhodes2
1University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2Reed College
5:00-6:00 PM Making it. . .
Monica Fabiani1, Diane Gooding2, Gabriele Gratton1, John Kline3
1University of Missouri-Columbia, 2University of Wisconsin-Madison, 3Eastern
Washington University
Wednesday, 4:00-8:00 PM
Imperial Ballroom Foyer
Registration
Wednesday, 5:30-7:30 PM
Moulin Rouge
Welcoming Reception
Thursday, 9:00-9:05 AM
Grand Ballroom
Opening Remarks
Judith M. Ford
Stanford University
Thursday, 9:05-10:00 AM
Grand Ballroom
Distinguished Lecture Series:
Scientific Analysis of Mind
If neuroimaging is the answer, what is the question?
Stephen M. Kosslyn
Harvard University
Chair: Kenneth Hugdahl
University of Bergen
(Supported by the F. J. McGuigan Research Fund)
Thursday, 10:00-10:30 AM
Grand Ballroom Foyer
Coffee Break
Thursday, 10:30 AM-12:30 PM
Grand Ballroom
Symposium 1
Neurophysiologic studies of schizophrenia
Chairs: Gerard E. Bruder1 & Lawrence E. Adler2
1New York State Psychiatric Institute, 2University of Colorado Health Sciences
Center and Denver VAMC
Psychotic disturbance and its impact on autonomic nervous system functioning
in schizophrenia
Robert Olbrich
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim
Antisaccade task performance in schizophrenia patients and questionnaire-identified
schizotypes
Diane C. Gooding
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Nicotine may modulate catecholaminergic-induced impairment of P50 auditory
gating
Lawrence E. Adler, Herbert T. Nagamoto, Ann Olincy, Ellen Cawthra, Merilyne
Waldo, Michael Johnson, Lee Hoffer, & Robert Freedman
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and Denver VAMC
N2 asymmetry and right ear advantage in a phonetic dichotic listening task:
Differences between schizophrenic and healthy adults
Gerard Bruder, Jurgen Kayser, Craig Tenke, Xavier AMador, Michelle Friedman,
Zafar Sharif, & Jack Gorman
New York State Psychiatric Institute
Missing contralateral dominance for auditory stimulation in schizophrenia
Brigitte Rockstroh1, Brett A. Clementz2, Christo Pantev3, Laura D. Blumenfeld2,
Jennifer McDowell2, Annette Sterr1, & Thomas Elbert1
1University of Konstanz, 2University of California, San Diego, 3University
of Muenster
Discussant: Monte S. Buchsbaum
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Thursday, 10:30 AM-12:30 PM
Moulin Rouge
Symposium 2
Psychophysiology in ergonomics symposium: ANS and CNS indices of
attention, workload and fatigue
Chair: James C. Miller
US Air Force Academy
Psychophysiological stress-strain processes during computer aided multi
tasking
Wolfram Boucsein, Bernd Figge, & Florian Schaefer
University of Wuppertal
Eye fixation related potentials in a long VDT task
Akihiro Yagi, Yuji Takeda, & Maxakazu Sugai
Kwansei Gakuin University
Tracking visual attention with SSVEPs
Timothy A. Weber, Orit Karni, & Arthur F. Kramer
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Oculomotor indicators of fatigue and impairment
Jeffrey Krichmar1, John Pollard2, Michael Russo3, Maria Thomas3, Helen Sing3,
David Thorne3, Thomas Balkin3, Nancy Wesensten3, Daniel Redmond3, Amy Welsh3,
Laura Rowland3, Dagny Johnson3, Randa Aladdin3, Richard Cephus3, Stanley
Hall3, & Gregory Belenky3
1PMI Incorporated, USA, 2US Department of Transportation, 3Walter Reed Army
Institute of Research
EEG-based monitoring of cognitive load during human computer interaction
(HCI)
Michael E. Smith & Alan Gevins
EEG Systems Laboratory & SAM Technology, USA
In-flight telemetric monitoring of helicopter pilot central nervous system
activity
John A. Caldwell, C. Frank Kelly, Kristi A. Roberts, & Nicholas K. Smythe
US Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory
Thursday, 12:30-2:00 PM
Lunch (on your own)
Thursday, 2:00-3:30 PM
Grand Ballroom
Paper Session I
The many facets of emotion
Chair: Jeanne Tsai
University of Minnesota
The effects of explicit and implicit categorization on event-related
potentials
Tiffany A. Ito & John T. Cacioppo
The Ohio State University
Specific approach- and withdrawal-related behaviors associated with anterior
electroencephalographic asymmetry
Anita Keener & Andrew Tomarken
Vanderbilt University
Hemispheric asymmetry in classical conditioning to facial stimuli
Sara Saban & Kenneth Hugdahl
University of Bergen
Facial reactions to masked stimuli: Unconsciously evoked emotional responses
Ulf Dimberg, Kurt Elmehed, & Monika Thunberg
Uppsala University
How can you fear what you do not see? Nonconscious fear conditioning
and heartbeat detection
Stefan Wiens, Edward S. Katkin, Stacey A. Lauridia, & Robert M. Kelsey
State University of New York at Stony Brook
Further evidence for the undoing effect of positive emotions
Barbara L. Fredrickson, Christine Branigan, Michele Tugade, & Roberta A.
Mancuso
University of Michigan
Affective startle modulation in clinical depression: Is severe depression
associated with aversive responses to pleasant stimuli?
Nicholas Allen, John Trinder, & Catherine Brennan
University of Melbourne
Thursday, 2:00-3:30 PM
Moulin Rouge
Symposium 3
Event-related brain potential studies of human working memory
Chair: Axel Mecklinger
Max-Planck Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience
Modulation of ERPs during "n-back" working memory tasks: Timing,
topography, task correlates, and individual differences
Michael E. Smith, Linda McEvoy, Georgia Rush, & Alan Gevins
EEG Systems Laboratory & SAM Technology, USA
How are objects and places maintained in working memory? ERP evidence
for dissociable object and spatial retention systems
Axel Mecklinger & Volker Bosch
Max-Planck Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience
A comparison of the brain areas activated by bottom-up and top-down access
to working memory
Ray Johnson, Jr.1 & Daniel S. Ruchkin2
1Queens College, 2University of Maryland
Discussant: Daniel S. Ruchkin
University of Maryland
Thursday, 3:30-4:30 PM
Grand Ballroom
Invited Address
Use-dependent alterations of cortical organization and its clinical
implications
Thomas Elbert
University of Konstanz
Chair: Bruce N. Cuthbert
National Institute of Mental Health, USA
Thursday, 4:30-5:30 PM
Moulin Rouge
Graduate Student Social Hour
Thursday, 5:30-8:00 PM
Dinner and free time (on your own)
Thursday, 8:00-10:30 PM
Imperial Ballroom
Poster Session I
Friday, 8:30-10:30 AM
Grand Ballroom
Symposium 4
Affective neuroscience: The contributions of hemodynamic neuroimaging
Chair: Richard J. Davidson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Emotional images: Arousal and activation
Margaret M. Bradley, Peter J. Lang, Jeffrey R. Fitzsimmons, Bruce N. Cuthbert,
& Dean Sabatinelli
University of Florida
The functional neuroanatomy of affective style: PET and fMRI studies
Richard J. Davidson, Wil Irwin, Heather Abercrombie, Christine L. Larson,
Stacey Schaefer, & Steven Sutton
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Brain correlates of unexpected panic attack: A human positron emission
tomographic study
Mats Fredrikson, Hakan Fischer, Jesper L. R. Andersson, & Tomas Furmark
Uppsala University
Neuroanatomy of attention to emotional experience
Richard D. Lane, Gereon R. Fink, Phyllis M. L. Chua, & Raymond J. Dolan
University of Arizona
Discussant: Kenneth Hugdahl
University of Bergen
Friday, 10:30-11:00 AM
Grand Ballroom Foyer
Coffee Break
Friday, 11:00 AM-12:00 PM
Grand Ballroom
Invited Address
Neurophysiological and neuroimaging studies of face processing in
humans
Gregory McCarthy
Duke University
Chair: Arthur F. Kramer
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Friday, 12:00-1:30 PM
Lunch (on your own)
Friday, 1:30-3:30 PM
Grand Ballroom
Symposium 5
Error-processing and the brain: An overview of current research
Chairs: Wolfgang H. R. Miltner1 & Michael G. H. Coles2
1Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, 2University of Illinois at Urbana
Champaign
Error-related brain activity: Historical introduction
Michael G. H. Coles, Marten K. Scheffers, & Clay Holroyd
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
The error negativity (Ne): Error detection or inhibition?
Michael Falkenstein, Joachim Hohnsbein, & Joerg Hoormann
Institute for Occupational Physiology, Germany
Where does the brain process errors? On the neural generators of the
ERN
Wolfgang H. R. Miltner1, Ulrike Lemke1, Clay Holroyd2, Marten K. Scheffers2,
& Michael G. H. Coles2
1Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, 2University of Illinois at Urbana
Champaign
Action monitoring deficits in obsessive-compulsive disorder
William J. Gehring, Joseph Himle, & Laura G. Nisenson
University of Michigan
Greed and fear: Error monitoring in low and high socialized individuals
John J. B. Allen & Ziya V. Dikman
University of Arizona
Discussant: Don M. Tucker
University of Oregon
Friday, 1:30-3:30 PM
Moulin Rouge
Symposium 6
Effects of rumination and emotion regulation on autonomic arousal
Chair: William Gerin
Cornell University Medical Center-The New York Hospital
Social support and the role of rumination on responses to stress
Laura Glynn1, Nicholas Christenfeld2, & William Gerin3
1University of California, Irvine, 2University of California, San Diego,
3Cornell University Medical Center-The New York Hospital
An integrative model of attentional and affective regulation
Julian F. Thayer1, Bruce H. Friedman2, Thomas D. Borkovec3, & Richard D.
Lane4
1University of Missouri-Columbia, 2Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University, 3The Pennsylvania State University, 4University of Arizona
Intrusive thoughts monitoring and avoidance: A response-discrepancy analysis
Randall S. Jorgensen, Cynthia A. Larson, & Craig K. Ewart
Syracuse University
Emotional suppression: There's more to it than meets the eye
James J. Gross
Stanford University
Discussant: Nicholas Christenfeld
University of California, San Diego
Friday, 3:30-4:00 PM
Grand Ballroom Foyer
Coffee Break
Friday, 4:00-5:00 PM
Grand Ballroom
Paper Session II
Responses to stress
Chair: Erin A. Hazlett
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Resiliency and reactivity in response to acoustic startle
Arlene R. King & Robert W. Levenson
University of California, Berkeley
Secretory immunoglobulin A and cardiovascular reactions to mental arithmetic
and paced breathing
Christopher Ring, Douglas Carroll, Jonathan Cooke, Adrian Ferraro, Gonneke
Willemsen, & Mark Drayson
University of Birmingham
Individual differences in baseline cortisol and adjustment to kindergarten:
A prospective study
N. A. Smider, M. J. Essex, N. Kalin, K. A. Buss, R. J. Davidson, H. H. Goldsmith,
& M. H. Klein
University of Wisconsin-Madison
The effects of opposite-sex and same-sex supportive friends on cardiovascular
reactivity during evaluative and non-evaluative tasks
Wendy Berry Mendes, Jim Blascovich, Jennifer Watson, & Terry Kelly
University of California, Santa Barbara
Psychophysiological stress dampening effects of ethanol in subjects with
a familial risk for alcoholism
Bernhard Croissant, Heiderose Pfeiffer, & Robert Olbrich
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim
Friday, 4:00-5:00 PM
Moulin Rouge
Paper Session III
Perspectives on attention
Chair: Brett A. Clementz
University of California, San Diego
Attention reduces early and increases late magnetic field amplitudes
Hubert Preissl1, Werner Lutzenberger1, & Niels Birbaumer1,2
1University of Tübingen, 2University of Padova
Event-related potentials to attended and ignored olfactory and trigeminal
stimuli
Mark W. Geisler1,2, Christina B. Middleton2, Christina Schlotfeldt2, &
Claire Murphy1,2
1University of California School of Medicine, 2San Diego State University
Directed attention to object parts and wholes: ERP evidence for lateralized,
parallel processing
Maureen A. Evans, Judith M. Shedden, Stephanie J. Hevenor, & Mark C. Hahn
McMaster University
Effects of visuospatial attention on HR and ERPs: Evidence for cortical
modulation of autonomic responses
F. M. van der Veen1,2, J. J. Lange2, G. Mulder2, L. J. M. Mulder2, & M.
W. van der Molen1
1University of Amsterdam, 2University of Groningen
Effects of baseline autonomic activity on perceptual sensitivity and
attention
Dmitry M. Davydov1 & David Shapiro2
1Serbsky National Research Center for Social and Forensic Psychiatry, 2University
of California, Los Angeles
Friday, 5:00-7:30 PM
Imperial Ballroom
Poster Session II
Saturday, 8:30-10:00 AM
Moulin Rouge
Symposium 7
Applying psychophysiology in the clinic
Chair: Walton T. Roth
Stanford University
Applied polysomnography: A success story?
Steven H. Woodward1 & Max Hirshkowitz2
1PAVAHCS, 2Houston VAMC & Baylor College of Medicine
Applications for medicine and neurology
Niels Birbaumer
University of Tübingen & University of Padova
Applications for the anxiety disorders
Gudrun Sartory1 & Peter J. Lang2
1University of Wuppertal, 2University of Florida
Applications for psychoses
Robert W. McCarley1 & William G. Iacono
1Harvard Medical School, 2University of Minnesota
Applications for dementia and specific cognitive deficits
John Polich1 & David Friedman2
1The Scripps Research Institute, 2New York State Psychiatric Institute
Saturday, 8:30-10:00 AM
Florentine
Symposium 8
Cortically induced gamma-band responses in man and animals: Expression
of stimulus presentation, stimulus meaning and/or higher cognitive functions?
Chair: Matthias M. Müller
University of Konstanz
Synchronization in the primate visual cortex: Concepts, methods and data
from multi-electrode recordings
Winrich A. Freiwald1, Andreas K. Kreiter2, & Wolf Singer1
1Max-Planck Institute for Brain Research, 2University of Bremen
Induced gamma-band oscillatory activity and visual object representation
Cathrine Tallon-Baudry & Oliver Bertrand
INSERM U280 Mental Processes and Cerebral Activation
Altering visually induced gamma-band responses by spatial selective visual
attention in the human EEG
Matthias M. Müller, Thomas Gruber, Andreas Keil, Thomas Elbert, & Brigitte
Rockstroh
University of Konstanz
Coherent gamma-band activity underlying human cognition
Urs Ribary & Rodolfo Llinas
New York University Medical Center
Mechanisms of representation and meaning revealed by gamma activity
Walter J. Freeman
University of California, Berkeley
Saturday, 10:00-10:30 AM
Moulin Rouge
Award for Distinguished Early Career Contribution to Psychophysiology
Pain perception in individuals at risk for hypertension
Christopher R. France
Ohio University
Chair: Rafael Klorman
University of Rochester
Saturday, 10:30-11:30 AM
Grand Ballroom
Presidential Address
Schizophrenia: The broken P300 and beyond
Judith M. Ford
Stanford University
Chair: William G. Iacono
University of Minnesota
Saturday, 11:30 AM-2:00 PM
Grand Ballroom
Luncheon and General Business Meeting
(lunch ticket required)
Chair: Judith M. Ford
Stanford University
Tursky Award for Outstanding Student Poster Presentation
Chair: William G. Iacono
University of Minnesota
Saturday, 2:00-2:30 PM
Far East
Open Meeting with the Editorial Board of Psychophysiology
Chair: Gregory A. Miller, Editor
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Saturday, 2:30-4:00 PM
Moulin Rouge
Symposium 9
Stress, trauma, and the development of psychopathology: Integrating
psychophysiology and emotional experience
Chair: Seth Pollak
University of Wisconsin-Madison
The startle response in posttraumatic stress disorder
Christian Grillon & Andrew Morgan
Yale University
ERP responses of maltreated children to facial expressions of affect
Seth Pollak1, Rafael Klorman2, Dante Cicchetti2,3, & Joan Brumaghim2
1University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2University of Rochester, 3Mt. Hope Family
Center
Emotional suppression and physiologic response to trauma cues in PTSD
Martina Rich, Timothy W. Smith, John C. Kircher, & Steven N. Martin
University of Utah
Is repetitive startling stressful to school-age boys?
Edward Ornitz
University of California, Los Angeles
Discussant: Peter J. Lang
University of Florida
Saturday, 2:30-4:00 PM
Florentine
Symposium 10
Beyond baseline: Dynamic changes in vagal tone
Chair: Jane A. Doussard-Roosevelt
University of Maryland
Individual differences in dynamic changes in vagal tone in five-month-old
infants
Olga V. Bazhenova & Jane A. Doussard-Roosevelt
University of Maryland
Infant development of task-related vagal regulation from 2 to 20 months
Patricia E. Suess & Marc Bornstein
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, USA
Cardiac correlates of aggressive/destructive behavior in two-year-old
children
Susan D. Calkins
University of North Carolina-Greensboro
Attention and vagal regulation in two-year-olds
Peter J. Marshall & Nathan A. Fox
University of Maryland
Discussant: Stephen W. Porges
University of Maryland
Saturday, 4:00-4:30 PM
Grand Ballroom Foyer
Coffee Break
Saturday, 4:30-5:30 PM
Grand Ballroom
Invited Address
Variations in maternal care and the development of individual differences
in neural systems mediating behavioral and endocrine responses to stress
Michael J. Meaney
McGill University
Chair: Richard J. Davidson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Saturday, 5:30-8:00 PM
Dinner and free time (on your own)
Saturday, 8:00-10:00 PM
Imperial Ballroom
Poster Session III
Saturday, 10:00 PM-12:00 AM
Moulin Rouge
Saturday Night Social
Sunday, 8:30-10:30 AM
Grand Ballroom
Continental Breakfast
Sunday, 9:00 AM-12:00 PM
Florentine
Methodology Workshop I
Understanding your lab: Amplifiers, computers, and other stuff
Chairs: Bruce N. Cuthbert1 & James J. Gross2
1National Institute of Mental Health, USA, 2Stanford University
Sunday, 9:00 AM-12:00 PM
Parisienne
Methodology Workshop II
Current developments in cardiovascular psychophysiology
Chair: Gary G. Berntson
The Ohio State University
Heart rate variability and respiratory sinus arrhythmia
Gary G. Berntson
The Ohio State University
Impedance cardiography
Michael T. Allen
University of Southern Mississippi
Current trends in cardiovascular psychophysiology
John T. Cacioppo
The Ohio State University
Sunday, 9:00 AM-12:00 PM
Far East
Methodology Workshop III
Dense EEG electrode arrays
Chairs: Leun Otten1 & Brigitte Rockstroh2
1Rotman Research Institute, 2University of Konstanz
How many electrodes do you want? Error as a function of electrode number
and interpolation method
George R. Mangun
University of California, Davis
An empirical approach to the limits of EEG/ERP spatial resolution
Mark Pflieger
Neuro Scan, Inc.
Identifying components, extracting composite variables, and searching
for latent variables in dense array data sets
Don M. Tucker
University of Oregon & Electrical Geodesics, Inc.
Independent components of event-related brain dynamics
Scott Makeig
Naval Health Research Center & University of California, San Diego
Activation of cortical networks during semantic and arithmetic fact retrieval
Frank Rösler
Philipps-University Marburg
1
EEG differentiation of worry and depression
Tracey Shissler, Deane Aikins, & William J. Ray
The Pennsylvania State University
2
Correlations between 16 self-report dimensions of emotional experience and
fast fourier transform (FFT) analysis of electroencephalographic data
Adam Blai, Suzanne Weinstein, & William J. Ray
The Pennsylvania State University
3
Individual differences in worry and the startle reflex during worry, sadness,
and neutral verbal-linguistic activity
C.E. Molnar, A. Chilton, J.T. Coyle, W.J. Ray, M.G. Newman, T.D. Borkovec,
&
K.S. Quigley
The Pennsylvania State University
4
Cross-modal prepulse modification of ERP & startle
Serkan Oray, Zhong-Lin Lu, & Michael Dawson
University of Southern California
5
To live and love in L.A.: Startling relationships
Veronica Y. Mejia1, Anna Marie Medina1, Michael E. Dawson1, Anne M. Schell2,
& Gayla Margolin1
1University of Southern California, 2Occidental College
6
Is there more to discrete prepulses than meets the eye?
Jonathan Wynn 1, Michael Dawson 1, & Anne Schell 2
1University of Southern California, 2Occidental College
7
Topography of the presaccadic negativity in schizophrenic patients and healthy
controls
Ch. Klein1, T. Heinks1, B. Andresen2, P. Berg3, E. Hafstad1, R. Mass2, S.
Moritz2, U. Buck2, & D. Naber2
1University of Freiburg, 2University of Hamburg, 3University of Konstanz
8
Improvement of antisaccade and neuropsychological performance during childhood
Ch. Klein, F. Foerster, & R. Vattes
University of Freiburg
9
Monetary incentive and working memory load modulate anterior brain activity
Steven K. Sutton1, Alexander J. Shackman2, & Richard J. Davidson2
1University of Miami, 2University of Wisconsin-Madison
10
Vagal tone in infancy: Heritability, behavioral correlates, and EEG
Kristin A. Buss, Jessica Malmstadt, Isa Dolski, Dave Caranfa, Richard J.
Davidson, & H. Hill Goldsmith
University of Wisconsin-Madison
11
Affective style, frontal EEG asymmetry and the time course of the emotion-modulated
startle response
Christine L. Larson, Steven K. Sutton, & Richard J. Davidson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
12
ERP correlates of central executive (CE) function during working memory
tasks
Ivan Kiss, Hannah Pazderka-Robinson, & Kevin Phillips
Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital & University of Alberta
13
Electrophysiological correlates of self-rated affective stimuli in a 3 stimulus
oddball paradigm
Hannah Pazderka-Robinson, Ivan Kiss, & Kevin Phillips
Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital & University of Alberta
14
Psychophysiological correlates of narcissism during active coping
Robert M. Kelsey1, Sidney R. Ornduff2, Sarah Reiff3, & Carlotta Arthur1
1State University of New York at Stony Brook, 2Long Island University at
Brooklyn, 3University of Massachusetts Medical Center
15
Cardiovascular reactivity to psychological stress in three racial/ethnic
groups
Carlotta M. Arthur, Robert M. Kelsey, & Edward S. Katkin
State University of New York at Stony Brook
16
Physiological detection of deception and the false memory phenomenon
Stefan Wiens, Gewn-hi Park, Edward S. Katkin, Suparna Rajaram, & Robert
M. Kelsey
State University of New York at Stony Brook
17
EEG mapping of phonological and semantic processes in Italian and German
subjects: A cross-linguistic study
Alessandro Angrilli1,2, Christian Dobel2, Thomas Elbert2, Luciano Stegagno1,
Daniela Palomba1, & Brigitte Rockstroh2
1University of Padova, 2University of Konstanz
18
Evidence for an expansion of the tonotopic map in the auditory cortex of
blind persons
Annette Sterr1, Brigitte Rockstroh1, Thomas Elbert1, Matthias M. Müller1,
Christo Pantev2, & Edward Taub3
1University of Konstanz, 2University of Münster, 3University of Alabama
at Birmingham
19
Localization of working memory activity in multi-channel recordings
Andreas Löw1, Brigitte Rockstroh1, Rudolf Cohen1, Olaf Hauk1, Patrick
Berg1, & Wolfgang Maier2
1University of Konstanz, 2University of Bonn
20
Visually-induced gamma band response is not only modulated by stimuli features
but also by visual spatial attention
Thomas Gruber, Matthias M. Müller, Andreas Keil, & Thomas Elbert
University of Konstanz
21
Event-related potentials and gamma-band response in viewing rotating ambiguous
pictures
A. Keil1, M. M. Müller1, T. Elbert1, T.Gruber1, & William J. Ray2
1University of Konstanz, 2The Pennsylvania State University
22
Dyslexia and differences in the functional organization of auditory cortex:
Evidence from event-related magnetic fields
Sabine Heim1, Juergen Kaufmann1, Ivonne Fuechter1, Carsten Eulitz1, Christo
Pantev2, Antoinette Lamprecht-Dinnesen2, Peter Matulat2, Petra Scheer2,
Marianne Borstel2, & Thomas Elbert1
1University of Konstanz, 2University of Münster
23
Orienting to structural features in radio messages
Robert F. Potter, Annie Lang, & Paul D. Bolls
Indiana University
24
Tabloid television: Arousal, attention, and memory
Annie Lang, Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Shuhua Zhou, Paul D. Bolls, & Robert
F. Potter
Indiana University
25
I saw it on the radio: Listeners' physiological and cognitive responses
to imagery eliciting radio commercials
Paul D. Bolls, Robert F. Potter, & Annie Lang
Indiana University
26
Effects of 5-HT3 receptor antagonists on gastric tachyarrhythmia and the
symptoms of motion sickness
Max E. Levine, Jennifer Chillas, Robert M. Stern, & Glenn W. Knox
The Pennsylvania State University
27
Acuband relieves symptoms of motion sickness and abnormal gastric dysrhythmias
Michael D. Jokerst, Eric R. Muth, Chris Hollis, & Robert M. Stern
The Pennsylvania State University
28
Event-related potential topography in illusory recognition
Antoinette R. Miller, J. Peter Rosenfeld, & Christopher Baratta
Northwestern University
29
Psychological and psychophysiological correlates of cognitive appraisals
of stress
Tamera R. Schneider1 & Edward S. Katkin2
1Yale University, 2State University of New York at Stony Brook
30
Influence of immediate and delayed responses on a frontal positive slow
wave in the ERP
Stefanie Maier, Ewald Naumann, Gabriele Becker, Dirk Hagemann, Alexander
Luerken, & Dieter Bartussek
University of Trier
31
Electrocortical correlates of negative priming
Ewald Naumann, Christian Fleischer, & Axel Buchner
University of Trier
32
The lateral presentation of words: An ERP study with subjects scoring high
on a bodily complaint scale - preliminary results
A. Luerken, E. Naumann, F. Gerhards, G. Becker, D. Hagemann, & S. Maier
University of Trier
33
The rejection of ocular artifacts in spontaneous EEG asymmetry research
does not make a difference
Dirk Hagemann, Ewald Naumann, Stefanie Maier, Alexander Luerken, Gabi Becker,
& Dieter Bartussek
University of Trier
34
Heart rate deceleration, respiration frequency decrease and skin conductance
responses to affective visual stimulation of negative valence: Emotion,
attention or orienting markers?
E. Tato Sokhadze, Imgap Yi, Sangsup Choi, Kyung-Hwa Lee, & Jin-Hun Sohn
Chungnam National University
35
ANS and EEG differentiation of emotions induced by pictorial stimuli: Some
differences within similar response pattern in passive viewing mode
Jin-Hun Sohn, Imgap Yi, Kyung-Hwa Lee, E. Tato Sokhadze, & Sangsup Choi
Chungnam National University
36
Music facilitates recovery of physiological effects produced by aversive
visual stimulation
Kyung-Hwa Lee, Imgap Yi, Sangsup Choi, E. Tato Sokhadze, Yeounsuk Park,
&
Jin-Hun Sohn
Chungnam National University
37
Cardiac vagal control: A psychophysiological correlate of emotional expressivity
Michele M. Tugade & Barbara L. Fredrickson
University of Michigan
38
Anger ideals and differences in duration of physiological arousal
Roberta A. Mancuso & Barbara L. Fredrickson
University of Michigan
39
Valence-dependent modulation of cardiac acceleration: Is it due to respiration?
Thomas Ritz1, Miriam Thoens2, & Bernhard Dahme2
1University of London, 2University of Hamburg
40
Heart rate variability in speech and non-speech fearful individuals
Kate Peasley-Miklus, Jason D. Robinson, & Scott R. Vrana
Purdue University
41
Responses to affective pictures among African-American adolescents
Scott R. Vrana & David Rollock
Purdue University
42
Effects of emotion on self-focused attention, heart rate and facial EMG
Georgia Panayiotou1 & Scott R. Vrana2
1Mississippi State University, 2Purdue University
43
An MEG study of auditory evoked response suppression in schizophrenia
Laura D. Blumenfeld & Brett A. Clementz
University of California, San Diego
44
Ocular motor delayed response task performance of schizophrenia spectrum
subjects
Colleen A. Brenner, Jennifer E. McDowell, Kristen Cadenhead, & Brett A.
Clementz
University of California, San Diego
45
For better or worse?: Habituation or sensitization in phobic reactivity?
Dean Sabatinelli, Margaret M. Bradley, Bruce N. Cuthbert, & Peter J. Lang
University of Florida
46
Assessing the heart's desire: Cardiac patterns in affective perception
Margaret M. Bradley
University of Florida
47
Fear potentiation of cardiac defense in phobic subjects
María Sánchez1, Isabel Ramírez1, María Carmen
Fernández1, Jaime Vila1, Margaret M. Bradley2, & Peter J. Lang2
1University of Granada, 2University of Florida
48
Emotional modulation of cardiac defense in humans
María Sánchez1, Isabel Ramírez1, María Carmen
Fernández1, Jaime Vila1, Margaret M. Bradley2, & Peter J. Lang2
1University of Granada, 2University of Florida
49
Team rivalry: Motivated attention in die-hard football fans
Charles Hillman1, Bruce Cuthbert2, Harald Schupp3, & Peter Lang2
1University of Maryland, 2University of Florida, 3University of Greifswald
50
An fMRI study of working memory in schizophrenic outpatients
William M. Perlstein1,2, Fred W. Sabb2, Jonathan D. Cohen2,3, & Cameron
S. Carter2
1University of Florida, 2University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Western
Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, 3Carnegie Mellon University
51
The effect of caffeine-induced arousal and attentional direction on startle
prepulse inhibition
A. Elden, & M.A. Flaten
University of Tromsoe
52
Impaired classical eyeblink conditioning in elderly subjects: The role of
autonomic arousal
Magne Arve Flaten & Oddgeir Friborg
University of Tromsoe
53
Caffeine-associated stimuli generate arousal: An experimental model of the
placebo effect
Magne Areve Flaten1 & Terry D. Blumenthal2
1University of Tromsoe, 2Wake Forest University
54
Attention, valence, threat/challenge, and the startle reflex
M. Scott Bovelsky & Terry D. Blumenthal
Wake Forest University
55
Affective and physiological responses to self-confrontation with computer
displayed profile images
David Amram1, Nina K. Anderson1,2, & Donald B. Giddon1
1Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 2Health Programs Intl.
56
Pharmacological modulation of autonomic nervous system activity and effects
on cognitive, emotional and memory processes. Part 1: Value of heart rate
variability, blood pressure variability and systolic time intervals in reflecting
changes of autonomic tone
Hartmut Schächinger, Wolf Langewitz, Rudolf Ritz, & Markus Weinbacher
University Hospital Basel
57
Pharmacological modulation of autonomic nervous system activity and effects
on cognitive, emotional and memory processes. Part 2: Self reported affect
states, cardioception and valence ratings of facial expressions and other
pictures
Lukas Mundorff, Hartmut Schächinger, & Wolf Langewitz
University Hospital Basel
58
Pharmacological modulation of autonomic nervous system activity and effects
on cognitive, emotional and memory processes. Part 3: Impact of sympathetic
activation on the acoustic startle response
Marc Lüthy & Hartmut Schächinger
University Hospital Basel
59
Pharmacological modulation of autonomic nervous system activity and effects
on cognitive, emotional and memory processes. Part 4: Sympathetic activation
and memory for emotional events
Tobias Moor, Hartmut Schächinger, Alexander Kiss, & Wolf Langewitz
University Hospital Basel
60
Lateralized consonant identification during affective word processing: An
event-related potential study
F. Joseph McClernon
Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
61
Psychophysiological research and career development: Funding opportunities
at NIMH
Mary Ellen Oliveri
National Institute of Mental Health
62
3-D striatal thalamic volume and functional correlates of startle modification
in schizophrenia
Erin A. Hazlett, Monte S. Buchsbaum, Melissa B. Singer, & Andrew Casimir
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
63
fMRI Imaging of sex differences in pain response
M.S. Buchsbaum1, C.Y. Tang1, B. Buchsbaum2, D. Lu1, T.C. Wei1, J.L. Spiegel
Cohen1, & S.W. Atlas1
1Mount Sinai School of Medicine, 2University of California, Irvine
64
The handedness effect in processing laboratory stress: The electrodermal
(EDR), heart rate and EEG responses
Nadezhda E. Lysenko, Elizabeth K. Shott, & Gennady G. Arakelov
Lomonosov' Moscow State University
65
Ambivalence in social relationships predicts cardiovascular reactivity to
acute stress
Julianne Holt-Lunstad, Darcy Uno, J.B. Flinders, & Bert N. Uchino.
University of Utah
66
Age-related differences in cardiovascular reactivity to stress
Darcy Uno, Julianne Holt-Lunstad, J. B. Flinders, & Bert N. Uchino
University of Utah
67
A comparison of stimulus- and response-locked ERP activity elicited during
episodic recall and recognition
Ray Johnson, Jr. & John Zhu
Queens College
68
Latent inhibition in young and old adults
Pamela Flax1, Diane L. Filion2, Douglas R. Denney1, & Joan McDowd2
1University of Kansas, 2University of Kansas Medical Center
69
A new method for detecting LRP onsets and onset latency differences
Peter J. Gianaros & J. Toby Mordkoff
The Pennsylvania State University
70
Affective information processing in schizophrenia: A psychophysiological
analysis
Sarah E. Morris, Cindy M. Yee, & Keith H. Nuechterlein
University of California, Los Angeles
71
Effects of stimulus intensity on P50 suppression in schizophrenia
Todd J. Farchione, Cindy M. Yee, Sarah E. Morris, & Keith H. Nuechterlein
University of California, Los Angeles
72
Moderation of the auditory P50 by a psychological stressor among subtypes
of schizophrenia
Patricia M. White1, Cindy M.Yee1, Keith H. Nuechterlein1, & Donna A. Wirshing2
1University of California, Los Angeles, 2West Los Angeles Veterans Affairs
Medical Center
73
Effects of different concentrations of pickle juice on facial EMG activity
Catherine A. Tyner, Maria D. Levy, Jason E. Scozzafava, Kathleen A. McChesney,
Kathryn A. Player, & Senqi Hu
Humboldt State University
74
Facial EMG activity reflects taste sensory experience
Kathryn A. Player, Kathleen A. McChesney, Maria D. Levy, Jason E. Scozzafava,
Catherine A. Tyner, & Senqi Hu
Humboldt State University
75
Effects of tasting sugar, salt, and water on facial EMG activity
Maria D. Levy, Catherine A. Tyner, Kathleen A. McChesney, Kathryn A. Player,
Jason E. Scozzafava, & Senqi Hu
Humboldt State University
76
Systematic investigation of physiological correlates to motion sickness
provoked by viewing an optokinetic rotating drum
Kathleen A. McChesney, Kathryn A. Player, Jason E. Scozzafava, & Senqi Hu
Humboldt State University
77
Optokinetic nystagmus correlates with severity of vection-induced motion
sickness and gastric tachyarrhythmia
Jason E. Scozzafava, Kathryn A. Player, Kathleen A. McChesney, Catherine
A. Tyner, Maria D. Levy, & Senqi Hu
Humboldt State University
78
Independent components of event-related brain dynamics
Scott Makeig1,2, Tzyy-Ping Jung3, & Terrence J. Sejnowsk2,3
1Naval Health Research Center, 2University of California, San Diego 3The
Salk Institute
79
Spatial analysis of spontaneous EEG during cognitive tasks
Charles W. Anderson & David A. Peterson
Colorado State University
80
PCA-derived vector filters for the identification of ERP components
Blair D. Hicks1, Brandy G. Isaacks1, Gabriele Gratton2, Cindy M. Yee3, &
Gregory A. Miller1
1University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2University of Missouri Columbia,
3University of California, Los Angeles
81
Smoking affects response magnitude and onset of response-locked but not
stimulus-locked LRP
Michael E. Houlihan1, Walter S. Pritchard1,2, Thomas D. Guy2, & John H.
Robinson1,2
1Wake Forest University School of Medicine, 2R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
82
P300 and response selection revisited using independent-components analysis
(ICA)
Walter S. Pritchard1,2, Michael E. Houlihan2, & John H. Robinson1,2
1R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, 2Wake Forest University School of Medicine
83
Attention and emotion in the affective startle eyeblink modification: Abnormalities
of the valence modulated PPI in affect blunted schizophrenia outpatients
Martin Volz, Peter Kirsch, Erhard Schneeweiss, Miriam Roehrig, & Eibe Rudolf
Rey
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim
84
Deficits in the differential autonomic conditioning in schizophrenics: The
role of attentional and emotional disturbances
Peter Kirsch & Martin Volz
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim
85
Imaging the learning brain: Temporal-spatial analysis of magnetic brain
activity during differential eyeblink conditioning in man
Peter Kirsch1, Martina Kirsch2, & Michael Scherg2
1Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim, 2University of Heidelberg
86
The impact of police job stress on emotional responding during marital interaction
Nicole A. Roberts1, Hideko Uchida2, & Robert W. Levenson1
1University of California, Berkeley, 2San Francisco State University
87
Age and gender differences in physiology during marital interaction
Cenita S. Kupperbusch & Robert W. Levenson
University of California, Berkeley
88
Do baseline adjustments only apply to physiology variables? The case for
simultaneous adjustment of physiological and self-report variables
Wm. Peter Flannery, Robert. W. Levenson, & Kelly Werner
University of California, Berkeley
89
Using a forest of electrodes to clear a garden path: Identifying the ERP
components elicited by disambiguating words
Kevin M. Spencer1, Axel Mecklinger2, Angela D. Friederici2, & Emanuel Donchin1
1University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2Max-Planck Institute of Cognitive
Neuroscience
90
The mental prosthesis: Assessing the speed of a P300-based brain computer
interface
Kevin M. Spencer, Orit Karni, Ranjith Wijesinghe, & Emanuel Donchin
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
91
Absolute pitch and the P300: The question of task difficulty and strategy
Laura A. Bischoff, Roni Granot, & Emanuel Donchin
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
92
Counter mimicry effects as a function of racial attitudes
P. Herrera, P. Bourgeois, & U. Hess
University of Quebec at Montreal
93
Impedance pneumography: From noise to signal in impedance cardiography
John M. Ernst1, Daniel A. Litvack2, David Lozano2, John T. Cacioppo2, &
Gary G. Berntson2
1Illinois Wesleyan University, 2The Ohio State University
94
ERPs and evaluative categorizations: An index of the negativity bias
Jeff T. Larsen, N. Kyle Smith, Tiffany A. Ito, & John T. Cacioppo
The Ohio State University
95
Social evaluation and cardiovascular response: Effects of audience status
and the fixedness of a behavioral challenge
Karen Killebrew & Rex Wright
University of Alabama at Birmingham
96
Autonomic and attentional correlates of affective processing
Michela Sarlo, Daniela Palomba, Alessandro Angrilli, & Luciano Stegagno
University of Padova
97
Synchronous oscillations in the gamma band evoked to task-relevant stimuli
Albert R. Haig & Evian Gordon
Westmead Hospital & University of Sydney
98
ERPs with and without an "Orienting Reflex"
E. Gordon, H. Bahramali, L. Lim, & A. Haig
Westmead Hospital
99
Adaptive changes of event-related potential N2b concomitant with skin conductance
response during a sensory discrimination task
Chong Lee Lim, Christopher Rennie, & Evian Gordon
University of Sydney & Westmead Hospital
100
A "P300a" in an "Attend" condition paradigm?
Jim Lagopoulos, Evian Gordon, Homayoun Bahramali, Chris Rennie, Chong L.
Lim, Paul Clouston, & John G.L. Morris
Westmead Hospital
1
Relationship between neuronal and hemodynamic signals: An optical imaging
study
Gabriele Gratton, Marsha R. Goodman-Wood, & Monica Fabiani
University of Missouri-Columbia
2
Response competition within the motor cortex: An optical imaging study
M. Catherine DeSoto, Gabriele Gratton, & Monica Fabiani
University of Missouri-Columbia
3
ERP analysis of task switching during a spatial Stroop task
M. Catherine DeSoto, Monica Fabiani, & Gabriele Gratton
University of Missouri-Columbia
4
Differential effects of stimulus dimension and memory load in a working
memory task
Emily Wee & Monica Fabiani
University of Missouri-Columbia
5
Coping style and anger control modify cardiovascular responses to mental
arithmetic and mirror tracing
Linda Hunt, Krista Stephens, Amy Lanham, Diane Steinman, & Albert Boquet
University of Central Oklahoma
6
Cardiovascular reactivity to laboratory stress is modified by anger and
exercise
Chad Watts, Linda Hunt, Amy Lanham, Krista Stephens, Scott Hazlett, &
Albert Boquet
University of Central Oklahoma
7
Sounds startling: Acoustic probes in acoustic foregrounds
Thomas Russmann, Margaret M. Bradley, & Peter J. Lang
University of Florida
8
Film noir: Emotion in black and white
Margaret M. Bradley, Jana Axelrad, Maurizio Codispoti, Bruce N. Cuthbert,
&
Peter J. Lang
University of Florida
9
Stimulus complexity and affective contents: Startle reactivity over time
Maurizio Codispoti, Margaret M. Bradley, Bruce N. Cuthbert, Ornella Montebarocci,
& Peter J. Lang
University of Florida
10
Scrapes, stabs, and steel: Dental fear and dental imagery
Evelyn Sullivan, Bruce N. Cuthbert, Katherine Karpinia, & Peter J. Lang
University of Florida
11
Spatio-temporal dynamics of verbal working memory: Parallel fMRI and ERP
studies
William M. Perlstein1,2, Fred W. Sabb2, Jonathan D. Cohen2,3, & Cameron
S. Carter2
1University of Florida, 2University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Western
Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, 3Carnegie Mellon University
12
The effects of a session of cigarette smoking on heart period variability
and complexity
Rachel E. Nabors-Oberg1, Julian F. Thayer1, Ray Niaura2, & John J. Sollers
III3
1University of Missouri-Columbia, 2Brown University, 3University of Oklahoma
13
Spectral analysis of heart rate during the transition of orthostasis
Anita J. Sarno, Melanie Pearson, Rachel Nabors-Oberg, & Julian Thayer
University of Missouri-Columbia
14
The thrill of the ride: Sensation seeking and heart rate variability
Melanie A. Pearson, Rachel Nabors-Oberg, A. Brose, B. Dade, K. Davis, J.
Furrer, R. Gross, S. Kent, P. Luther, E. Prenger, J. Remidez, L. Schreiman,
M. Starke, I. Smith, S. Weathermax, S. WeMott, & Julian Thayer
University of Missouri-Columbia
15
The effect of signal tone pitch on heart rate response to tone-cued emotional
imagery
Scott R. Vrana
Purdue University
16
Effects of evaluation anxiety and self-focused attention on heart rate during
two reaction time tasks
Georgia Panayiotou1, Scott R. Vrana2, & Deric Kenne1
1Mississippi State University, 2Purdue University
17
Semantic and emotional expectancy in major depression and dysthymia
Brooks R. Casas, Patricia J. Deldin, & Jennifer L. Best
Harvard University
18
Cognitive restructuring of EEG patterns in mood disorders
Patricia J. Deldin & Pearl Chiu
Harvard University
19
Cognition in the depressive disorders: The CNV link to the expectation of
emotional information
Jennifer L. Best & Patricia J. Deldin
Harvard University
20
Unilateral tumor in the amygdala and hippocampus: Lateralized impairment
of fear potentiated startle
Alfons O. Hamm, Almut I. Weike, Jochen Machetanz, Harald T. Schupp, &
Christof Kessler
University of Greifswald
21
Trace conditioning with brief conditioned stimulus durations: Prepulse inhibition
and startle potentiation effects
Almut I. Weike, Dorte Westphal, Harald T. Schupp, & Alfons O. Hamm
University of Greifswald
22
Baroreceptor sensitivity, pain perception of cold pressor stress, and blood
pressure in type 1 diabetes mellitus
Jeffrey L. Kibler, Barry E. Hurwitz, Jennifer B. Marks, Karen, L. Kuskin,
Manuel A. Gonzalez, Jessie R. Hatfield, Jay S. Skyler, & Neil Schneiderman
University of Miami
23
Mechanoreceptors responsible for transducing heartbeat sensations
Kelley A. Knapp & Jasper Brener
State University of New York at Stony Brook
24
Cardiovascular reactivity during the Stroop Test: Caffeine use, amount of
sleep, anger, and Type A behavior pattern in males and females
Randall A. Hoskinson, Jr., J. Alexander Dale, & David E. Anderson
Allegheny College
25
Visceral awareness in children, adolescents, and young adults
Eric J. Rieger, Gary E. Jones, Jeffry B. Snell, Geoffrey C. Phillips, Laura
A. Pawlow, & Randye G. Johnson
University of Southern Mississippi
26
Slow potentials and P300 in motor and non-motor processing during cognitive
challenge
Ross J. Apparies, Charles H. Hillman, & Bradley D. Hatfield
University of Maryland
27
Flat affect and social disengagement in depression: Facial and autonomic
activity in response to social and solitary imagery
J. G. Gehricke & D. Shapiro
University of California, Los Angeles
28
A startle reflex and reaction time examination of the anxious individual's
response to threat
Mark W. Miller1 & Christopher J. Patrick2
1Boston VA Medical Center, 2Florida State University
29
Cortical reorganization in phantom pain: An fMRI study
N. Birbaumer1,2, M. Lotze1, W. Grodd1, & H. Flor3
1University of Tübingen, 2University of Padova, 3Humboldt-University
Berlin
30
Peak 2 amplitude of the long-latency auditory evoked potential is mediated
by alpha-2-noradrenergic receptors
C. M. Specht, M. E. Starick, & D. W. Shucard
State University of New York at Buffalo
31
Effects of manipulation of stimulus parameters on long-latency auditory
evoked potentials in the albino rat
M. E. Starick, C. M. Specht, & D. W. Shucard
State University of New York at Buffalo
32
Slow brain potentials during a visual continuous performance test
Rob Drake, Ayda Tekok-Kilic, & David W. Shucard
State University of New York at Buffalo
33
Event-related potentials and attentional deficits in post-traumatic stress
disorder
Janet L. Shucard, Danielle McCabe, Herman Szymanski, & Jeanine Sparks
State University of New York at Buffalo
34
Effect of the number of mediating stimuli in associations on skin conductance
and reaction time
Toru Aotsuka & Koich Ono
Komazawa University
35
The differential significance of number vs. magnitude of spontaneous SCRs
during a stimulus-detection task
Leslie D. Kirby, Craig A. Smith, & Lawrence J. Contratti
Vanderbilt University
36
The good, the bad and the boring: Event-related potentials to affective
words
F. Joseph McClernon & Brett E. Froeliger
Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
37
P300 stability and MZ twin similarity across time
Lisa Hoffman, Scott R. Carlson, William G. Iacono, & David T. Lykken
University of Minnesota
38
P300 amplitude in sons of alcoholics: Effects of comorbid psychopathology
Scott R. Carlson, Stephen M. Malone, & William G. Iacono
University of Minnesota
39
Understanding social facilitation in terms of cardiovascular challenge and
threat
Sarah B. Hunter, Wendy Berry Mendes, & Jim Blascovich
University of California, Santa Barbara
40
Event-related potentials to ecologically valid and invalid novel pictures
in a visual oddball paradigm
Sue A. Woodward, Mark H. McManis, Melissa E. Lewis, Mary Anne Fox, &
Jerome Kagan
Harvard University
41
Mismatch negativity measures of auditory temporal processing
Renee N. Desjardins, Laurel J. Trainor, & Cindy Polak
McMaster University
42
P50 sensory gating in schizophrenia: Effects of temporal variability
Julie V. Patterson1, Yi Jin1, Matt Gierczak2, Curt Sandman1, William Bunney1,
& Steven Potkin1
1University of California, Irvine, 2MIG Systems Engineering, USA
43
Effects of information load on auditory ERPs (P3a/P3b) in HIV-infected children
Julie A. Gonzales1, Allan J. Nash1, & Susan M. Widmayer2
1Florida Atlantic University, 2Children's Diagnostic and Treatment Center
of South Florida
44
Spatio-temporal brain dynamics during card sorting: Half a second beyond
the frontal lobes
Francisco Barceló, Juan Manuel Muñoz Céspedes, Miguel
Angel Pozo, &
Francisco J. Rubia
Complutense University of Madrid
45
Random versus constant SOA: Implications for the interpretation of multiple-frame
ERP experiments
Stephanie J. Hevenor, Nicole J. Conrad, & Judith M. Shedden
McMaster University
46
Manipulation of resting anterior electroencephalographic asymmetries with
pleasant and unpleasant odors in elderly women
John P. Kline1, Ginni Blackhart1, Laura Groves1, Sherry R. Williams1, Kathrane
M. Woodward1, & Gary E. R. Schwartz2
1Eastern Washington University, 2University of Arizona
47
Gender specificity of resting anterior electroencephalographic asymmetry
and defensiveness in the elderly
John P. Kline1, Amy Schwartzenberger1, Ginni Blackhart1, Laura Groves1,
& Gary E. R. Schwartz2
1Eastern Washington University, 2University of Arizona
48
Individual differences in mood, emotion, and personality
Wm. Peter Flannery & Robert W. Levenson
University of California, Berkeley
49
Knowing feelings and feeling feelings: Are they connected?
Jose Soto, Nnamdi Pole, Loren M. McCarter, & Robert W. Levenson
University of California, Berkeley
50
Ethnic and gender differences in cardiovascular reactivity
Loren McCarter, Kimberly A. McCoy, & Robert W. Levenson
University of California, Berkeley
51
ERP evidence of perceptual and response-related processes in interhemispheric
interaction
Kevin M. Spencer & Marie T. Banich
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
52
Effects of ethnicity and acculturation on cardiovascular reactivity to stress
Amanda Medina, Rebecca Palacios-Esquivel, Maria Colotla, Julie Penley, &
Joe Tomaka
University of Texas at El Paso
53
Differences in stress responses between Hispanics and Anglos
Rebecca Palacios, Joe Tomaka, Maria Colotla, Mary M. Herrald, & Julie A.
Penley
University of Texas at El Paso
54
The role of personality in laboratory stress responses
Julie A. Penley, Joe Tomaka, & Cristina Bejarano
University of Texas at El Paso
55
The effects of self-awareness on cardiovascular reactivity, task performance,
and subjective responses to stress
Mary Herrald, Joe Tomaka, & L. Susy Rodriguez
University of Texas at El Paso
56
Context in ambulatory blood pressure: Explaining activity and posture variance
in daily life blood pressure
Michael D. Jokerst, Aimee Pavucek, Christine SooHoo, Parish Vaidya, Elizabeth
Orsega-Smith, & Mark P. Roy
The Pennsylvania State University
57
The effects of Stroop format on measures of cardiac rate, variability, and
contractility
Nathan C. Frederiksen, Bruce H. Friedman, & Thomas H. Ollendick
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
58
Composure at any cost? The cognitive and physiological consequences of emotional
suppression
Jane M. Richards & James J. Gross
Stanford University
59
Suppression self-efficacy and the psychophysiology of emotional suppression
Heather J. Miles & James J. Gross
Stanford University
60
RSA estimation during spontaneous breathing using a paced breathing calibration
Frank H. Wilhelm1, Jessica Berkowitz1, Mikkel Hansen1, Paul Grossman2, Walton
T. Roth1, & James J. Gross1
1Stanford University, 2Harvard University
61
Cognitive modulation of midbrain function: Task-related inhibition of the
pupillary light reflex
Stuart R. Steinhauer1, Ruth Condray1, Annette Kasparek1, & Daniel P. van
Kammen2
1University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine/VAMC, 2R.W. Johnson Pharmaceutical
Research Institute
62
Task relevancy and motor contributions to pupillary dilation are dissociated
in the sympathetic and parasympathetic pathways
Stuart R. Steinhauer, Ruth Condray, Annette Kasparek, & George G. Dougherty,
Jr.
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine/VAMC
63
An event-related potential investigation of semantic processing in criminal
psychopaths
Kent A. Kiehl, Robert D. Hare, John J.McDonald, & Peter F. Liddle
University of British Columbia
64
Bootstrap evidence for preserved semantic categorization in Wernicke's aphasia
Leyan O. L. Fernandes1, Blair D. Hicks1, Jennifer Keller1, Joseph Alper1,2,
Wendy Heller1, & Gregory A. Miller1
1University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2Carle Clinic and Hospital
65
Atypical hemispatial bias in alexithymics during processing of facial expressions
Keolani Taitano & Gregory A. Miller
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
66
Cross-measure generality of orienting anomalies in depression
Brandy G. Isaacks & Gregory A. Miller
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
67
Left words and right words: Hemispheric differences in semantic knowledge
organization
Kara D. Federmeier & Marta Kutas
University of California, San Diego
68
He really is a nurse: ERPs and anaphoric coreference
Jonathan W. King & Marta Kutas
University of California, San Diego
69
An ERP analysis of episodic memory for actions
Ava J. Senkfor1, Cyma Van Petten1, & Marta Kutas2
1University of Arizona, 2University of California, San Diego
70
Cognitive demands, situational anxiety, and prepulse inhibition
Sharon Steele, Daudi Gardner, Autumn Stewart, & Jules P. Harrell
Howard University
71
Cardiovascular activation on Wechsler Memory Scale performance
Jason Callaman, Ina N. Daniels, Martin Ewing, Kenya Palmer, & Jules P. Harrell
Howard University
72
Circadian and homeostatic aspects of sympathovagal dynamics during night
sleep and day sleep
Sander van Eekelen1, Gerard Kerkhof2, & Michel Varkevisser2
1University of Amsterdam, 2University of Leiden
73
Worry, focus of attention, and the startle reflex in generalized anxiety
disorder
C.E. Molnar, D.E. Aikins, J.T. Coyle, T.A. Shissler, E. Newell, W.J. Ray,
& T.D. Borkovec
The Pennsylvania State University
74
EEG components of generalized anxiety disorder
Deane E Aikins, Chris E. Molnar, Tracey A Shissler, William J. Ray, &
Thomas D. Borkovec
The Pennsylvania State University
75
Alteration of antisaccade and neuropsychological performance with healthy
aging
Ch. Klein, B. Fischer, W. Heiss, & M. Roth
University of Freiburg
76
Brain electrical activity and biochemical levels in infants of depressed
mothers
Nancy Aaron Jones1 & Tiffany Field2
1Florida Atlantic University, 2NOVA Southeastern University
77
Autonomic modes of control for tasks that differ in cognitive effort and
active or passive coping
John K. Lenneman, Shannon R. Rodriguez, & Richard W. Backs
Central Michigan University
78
A comparison of the evoked potential response to mid-inspiratory interruptions
vs. complete respiratory obstructions to breathing during NREM sleep
John Gora, Ian M. Colrain, & John Trinder
University of Melbourne
79
Stimulus probability and P3 in the respiratory-related evoked potential
(RREP)
Ian M. Colrain, Sarah Adey, & Kate E. Webster
The University of Melbourne
80
Respiratory load magnitude estimation and endogenous components of the RREP
Kate E. Webster & Ian M. Colrain
The University of Melbourne
81
ERPs, emotion, and the illusion of familiarity
Heather E. McNeely1, Jane Dywan2, & Sidney J. Segalowitz2
1University of Waterloo, 2Brock University
82
ERP and vagal tone indices of source memory & inhibitory control in aging
Wilma Veenhof1, Jane Dywan2, Sidney J. Segalowitz2, & Tammy James2
1University of Waterloo, 2Brock University
83
Cortical and cardiovascular activation and interactions during re-lived
emotion
Kim M. Dalton & Richard J. Davidson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
84
Temporal stability of the emotion modulated startle response
Christine L. Larson, Dante Ruffalo, Jennifer Nietert, & Richard J. Davidson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
85
Individual differences in prefrontal metabolic rate and dispositional positive
affect in depressed patients
Heather C. Abercrombie, Stacey M. Schaefer, Christine L. Larson, Kristen
A. Lindgren, Katherine M. Putnam, Terrence R. Oakes, Scott B. Perlman, James
E. Holden, & Richard J. Davidson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
86
Voluntary suppression and enhancement of negative affect
Daren C. Jackson, Christine L. Larson, Amy Hanna, Krista Horochena, Jennifer
White, & Richard J. Davidson
University of Wisconsin-Madison
87
Is P50 suppression moderated by P50 amplitude in schizophrenia?
Patricia M. White, Cindy M.Yee, & Keith H. Nuechterlein
University of California, Los Angeles
88
Moderation of the auditory P50 in undergraduate smokers exposed to a psychological
stressor
Maria Nazarian, Patricia M. White, & Cindy M. Yee
University of California, Los Angeles
89
The effect of subliminal death primes on facial EMG: Searching for the terror
in terror management
Jamie Arndt, John J.B. Allen, & Jeff Greenberg
University of Arizona
90
Stimulus-locked and response-locked potentials in the detection of deception
John J.B. Allen, Ralf Mertens, & Ziya V. Dikman
University of Arizona
91
Manipulating frontal brain activation with facial muscle movement
James A. Coan1 & John J.B. Allen1, & Eddie Harmon-Jones2
1University of Arizona, 2University of Wisconsin-Madison
92
A comparison of the use of different time series techniques to analyze phasic
coupling: A case study of cardiac and electrodermal activity
J. Kettunen & L. Keltikangas-Järvinen
University of Helsinki
93
Anxiety-related memory biases and psychophysiological responding in generalized
anxiety disorder
Lesley K. Harrison & Graham Turpin
University of Sheffield
94
Effect of coping styles monitoring/blunting on sleep architecture
Ursula Voss & Bettina Hossner
J.W. Goethe University Frankfurt
95
Visual event-related potentials (ERPs) to Chinese characters and English
words: A study of N400 variation
Yong Liang Ge, Wolfgang Guldin, & Otto-Joachim Grüsser
Freie Universität Berlin
96
Assessment of descending central modulation of pain responses in men and
women
Shannon Suchowiecki & Christopher R. France
Ohio University
97
Pain perception and risk for hypertension: A signal detection analysis
Christopher R. France, Kyle R. Bonesteel, Rick Massatti, Wendy H. Starcher,
Suzanne J. Smith, Lisa M. DiCarlo, & Jessica L. Rinker
Ohio University
98
Degree of exteroceptive suppression of temporalis activity is unrelated
to subjective pain ratings
Douglas J. French1, Christopher R. France2, & Michelle Henninger2
1University of Moncton, 2Ohio University
99
Reaction time and psychophysiological concomitants of chronic pain patients
in a lexical decision task with pain-related and neutral words
Amy D. Clegg1, Paul Haerich1, & Jay L. Brand2
1Loma Linda University, 2Haworth Corporation, USA
100
Facial muscle and autonomic responses in a lexical decision task with motivationally
salient stimuli
Paul Haerich & Amy D. Clegg
Loma Linda University
1
Tursky Award Winner
2
The search for valid infant EEG rhythms: Factor analysis of power data
Martha Ann Bell
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
3
Infant 6-9 Hz EEG synchronization during a memory task
Martha Ann Bell
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
4
Repression, suppression, restraint: Cardiovascular reactivity in metastatic
breast cancer patients
Janine Giese-Davis1, Sandie Sephton1, Jennifer Boyce1, Barbara Symons1,
John Cacioppo2, & David Spiegel1
1Stanford University School of Medicine, 2The Ohio State University
5
Gender differences in pain perception and beta-endorphin levels in patients
with coronary artery disease
David Sheffield1, Paula L. Biles2, Kathleen C. Light2, William Maixner2,
&
David S. Sheps1
1East Tennessee State University, 2University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
6
What we tell ourselves and how it makes us feel: The psychophysiology of
self talk
Penny D. Jennings, Stephen Lovejoy, Judy Stirling, & Monica Lara
Chapman University
7
Event-related potentials (ERPs) of depressed patients during hemifield presentations
of emotional stimuli: Relation of P3 amplitude and asymmetry to physical
anhedonia
Jürgen Kayser, Gerard Bruder, Craig Tenke, Jonathan Stewart, & Frederic
Quitkin
New York State Psychiatric Institute
8
Event-related brain potentials associated with perception of simultaneous
auditory objects
Claude Alain & Stephen R. Arnott
University of Toronto
9
Optimal signal bandwidth for the recording of surface EMG activity of facial,
jaw, oral, and neck muscles
A. van Boxtel
Tilburg University
10
Cognitive dysfunctioning following cardiac surgery: Longitudinal P300 results
in relationship to neuropsychological test performance
Eline F. Bruggemans1, Gert van Dijk1, Anton van Boxtel2, & Hans A. Huysmans1
1Leiden University Medical Center, 2Tilburg University
11
A comparison of melodic contour and interval processing in musicians and
non-musicians using event-related potentials
Renee N. Desjardins, Laurel J. Trainor, & Conrad Rockel
McMaster University
12
Retention of adaptation to optokinetic rotation-induced symptoms of motion
sickness and gastric tachyarrhythmia
Senqi Hu, Kathryn A. Player, Kathleen A. McChesney, Jason E. Scozzafava,
Catherine A. Tyner, & Maria D. Levy
Humboldt State University
13
Exploratory analyses of event-related potentials with a cluster-based mean
separation procedure
Juan C. Oliver-Rodriguez1 & David Smith2
Universidad Jaime1, New Mexico State University2
14
The locus of the interference effect in the Stroop-type task
Hiroaki Masaki1, Noriyoshi Takasawa2, & Katuo Yamazaki3
1Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, 2National Research Institute
of Police Science, 3Waseda University
15
The effects of neuroticism and emotion regulation on cardiovascular responsivity
James Kennedy & Nukte Edguer
Brandon University
16
Estrogen-opioid interactions and blood pressure reactivity
James A. McCubbin 1, Suzanne G. Helfer 1, Thomas M. Price 1, Jane A. Norton
2, Fred S. Switzer 1, Susan Allen 1, & Kenneth N. Muse 2
1Clemson University, 2University of Kentucky College of Medicine
17
Naltrexone administration increases salivary cortisol levels in women but
not in men
Laura Cousino Klein1, Janel Alberts2, Larry D. Jamner2, Hoyle Leigh3, Linda
J. Levine2, & Matthew D. Orenstein2
1University of California, Los Angeles, 2University of California, Irvine,
3University of California, San Francisco
18
The effect of task demands on attentional modulation of the startle blink
Ottmar V. Lipp & Valda Biezaitis
The University of Queensland
19
The arousing nature of affect intensity: Electrodermal activity and salivary
cortisol under stress
Patricia A. Brennan, Eric J. Vanman, Emily R. Grekin, & Elaine F. Walker
Emory University
20
Perseverative and adaptive problem solving strategies in children and adolescents:
A tonic and phasic heart rate study
Riek Somsen & Maurits van der Molen
University of Amsterdam
21
Eye movements and landscape aesthetics: Evidence for differential scanning
as a function of aesthetic preferences
Russ Parsons & Mark Olson
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
22
Blood pressure, hemodynamic, and cardiac autonomic responses to active and
passive challenges exhibit stability across a 1-week interval
Thomas W. Spalding
University of Maryland
23
Temporal behavior of the asymmetry of EEG activity in emotional states
Yoonseon Song1, Sang Hee Kim1, Chang Su Ryu1, & Min Cheol Whang2
1Electronics & Telecommunications Research Institute, South Korea, 2SangMyung
University
24
Emotional expression: Vocal acoustics and psychophysiology
Gary S. Katz1 & Jeffrey F. Cohn2
1California State University-Northridge, 2University of Pittsburgh
25
Study of dream mechanisms by eliciting sleep onset REM periods in normal
sleepers
Tomoka Takeuchi1,Anthony Ferrelli2, Tim Murphy2, Ben Williams2, Andrew Wrong2,
Mandy Mcdonald2, Andrea Gagnon2, Daryl Steger2, Sonya Balaban2, & Robert
D. Ogilvie2
1Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, 2Brock University
26
Localizing motor evoked potentials
Werner Muehlnickel, Anke Karl, & Herta Flor
Humboldt-University Berlin
27
Aversive conditioning in social phobics and healthy controls
Christiane Hermann, Silvio Ziegler, Grit Pohlann, & Herta Flor
Humboldt-University Berlin
28
A dissociation of cortical and subcortical processing of emotional events
in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and social phobia?
Herta Flor1, Anke Karl1, & Niels Birbaumer2
1Humboldt-University Berlin, 2University of Tübingen
29
Use of artificial neural networks to distinguish between healthy normals
and chronic fatigue patients
Ronald Gordon1, Henry J. Michalewski1, Ed Rzempoluck2, Trung Nguyen1, &
Arnold Starr1
1University of California, Irvine, 2University of Victoria
30
Slow potentials in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome
Henry J. Michalewski, Ronald Gordon, Darryl See, & Arnold Starr
University of California, Irvine
31
Rate of force development and the lateralized readiness potential
William J. Ray, Seymon Slobounov, & Robert Simon
The Pennsylvania State University
32
EEG correlates of wrist kinematics: A wavelet analysis
Seymon Slobounov, Robert Simon, Richard Tutwiler, & William J. Ray
The Pennsylvania State University
33
The perception of postural instability as revealed by Morlet wavelet transform
in EEG
S. Slobounov, R. Tutwiler, & E. Slobounova
The Pennsylvania State University
34
Cardiac reactivity during alcohol cue exposure and consumption
David J. Drobes & Raymond F. Anton
Medical University of South Carolina
35
The effect of trauma-related content in an active coping task on facial
and autonomic reactivity in women with post-traumatic stress disorder
Gregory McHugo1, Robert Kelsey2, Matthew Friedman1, Annmarie McDonagh-Coyle1,
John Jalowiec1, & Arvid Kappas3
1Dartmouth College, 2State University of New York at Stony Brook, 3Laval
University
36
Frontal EEG asymmetry in families
Andrey P. Anokhin & John W. Rohrbaugh
Washington University School of Medicine
37
New ambulatory impedance cardiograph validated against the Minnesota Impedance
Cardiograph
John J. Sollers III1, Paul A. Nakonezny2, Paul Kizakevich3, & William R.Lovallo1
1VAMC and University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, 2Texas Woman's
University, 3RTI Inc. World Wide Medical Data
38
Adrenocortical stress responses in relation to cognitive performance and
hemisphere asymmetry
Mustafa al'Absi1, Ken Hugdahl2, & William R. Lovallo3
1University of Minnesota School of Medicine, 2University of Bergen, 3Veterans
Affairs Medical Center & University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
39
Patterns of autonomic balance during demanding tasks in children and adolescents
Kristen Salomon & Karen A. Matthews
University of Pittsburgh
40
Span of apprehension in schizophrenia: An event-related potential study
Scott R. Sponheim1,2 & Kent M. Kodalen1
1Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Minneapolis, 2University of Minnesota
41
Autonomic features of sleep onset in PTSD
Steven H. Woodward & Ned J. Arsenault
National Center for PTSD and VA Palo Alto HCS
42
Opponent process theory and emotion: Startle and ANS measures
William Williams, Kristi Bronson, & Jamie McGill
Eastern Washington University
43
Mood and the energization process
Guido H.E. Gendolla, Andrea E. Abele, & Jan Kruesken
University of Erlangen
44
EEG evidence suggesting differential sensory processing in stutterers and
nonstutterers during working memory tasks
Brenda Ratcliff Baird
Hollins University
45
Efficacy of self-regulation of slow cortical potentials on temporal lobe
epilepsy: A replication and extension
U. Strehl1, N. Birbaumer1,2, B. Kotchoubey1, V. Blankenhorn3, & W. Froescher4
1University of Tübingen, 2University of Padova, 3Epilepsiezentrum Kehl
Kork, 4Neurologische Klinik Ravensburg-Weissenau
46
Measurement of human cerebellar activity during complex movements
Niels Birbaumer1,2, Werner Lutzenberger1, & Hubert Preissl1
1University of Tübingen, 2University of Padua
47
Brain processing of words in patients with ALS disease
C. Fritsch1, M. Schauer1, M. Weber1, N. Ghanayim1, B. Kotchoubey1, T. Hinterberger1,
A. Kübler1, J. Perelmouter1, & N. Birbaumer1,2
1University of Tübingen, 2University of Padua
48
The Thought Translation Device
Margarete Schauer1, Andrea Kübler1, Nimr Ghanayim1, Boris Kotchoubey1,
Juri Perelmouter1, Thilo Hinterberger1, Christoph Fritsch1, & Niels Birbaumer1,2
1University of Tübingen, 2University of Padova
49
Self report of chemical odor intolerance in college students predicts electroencephalographic
responses to low concentrations of isoamyl acetate
John P. Kline1, John Fishburne1, Iris R. Bell2, & Gary E.R. Schwartz2
1Eastern Washington University, 2University of Arizona
50
Gender differences in anterior EEG asymmetry in response to pleasant and
unpleasant odors
John P. Kline1, Kathrane M. Woodward1, Sherry R. Williams1, Ginni Blackhart1,
& Gary E.R. Schwartz2
1Eastern Washington University, 2University of Arizona
51
Effects of sleep on inhibitory gating of the auditory P50 response
Robert Freedman, Jay Griffith, & Lawrence E. Adler
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and Denver VAMC
52
Anticipatory saccades during smooth pursuit eye movements in schizophrenia:
Small amplitude saccades provide a larger effect size than those with amplitudes
greater than 4 degrees
Randal G. Ross, Ann Olincy, & Robert Freedman
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and Denver VAMC
53
The effects of increasing age on leading saccades
Ann Olincy1, Randal G. Ross1,2, & Robert Freedman1,2
1University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, 2Denver VAMC
54
The effect of nicotine on exogenous and endogenous spatial attention in
non-smokers
Dell L. Rhodes & Laura Ross
Reed College
55
Primary visual area may contribute to binocular rivalry
Fernando Valle-Inclan1, Steven A. Hackley2, Carmen Labra1, & Antonio Alvarez3
1University of La Coruna, 2University of Missouri-Columbia, 3University
of Santiago
56
Topographical analysis of ERPs in the stop signal paradigm: I. Response
activation and inhibition
G.J.M. van Boxtel1,2, M.W. van der Molen1, J.R. Jennings3, & C.H.M. Brunia2
1University of Amsterdam, 2Tilburg University, 3University of Pittsburgh
57
Topographical analysis of ERPs in the stop signal paradigm: II. Error processing
G.J.M. van Boxtel1,2, M.W. van der Molen1, J.R. Jennings3, & C.H.M. Brunia2
1University of Amsterdam, 2Tilburg University, 3University of Pittsburgh
58
Degree of mental rotation relates to amplitude of cardiac deceleration
J. Richard Jennings1, Maurits van der Molen2, & Kay B. Debski1
1University of Pittsburgh, 2University of Amsterdam
59
Therapeutic effects on differential electrocortical processing of phobic
objects in spider and snake phobics
Ingmar Gutberlet & Wolfgang H. R. Miltner
University of Jena
60
A repeated measures regression approach to psychophysiological data analysis
Edwin W. Cook III1 & Larry W. Hawk2
1University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2State University of New York at Buffalo
61
In the mood: Emotion and facial expressions during and after instrumental
music and during an emotional inhibition task
Charlotte vanOyen Witvliet1, Scott R. Vrana2, & Nita Webb-Talmadge2
1Hope College, 2Purdue University
62
Incidental and intentional retrieval evoke different repetition effect topographies
Trevor B. Penney1, Axel Mecklinger1, H. John Hilton2, Lynn A. Cooper2, &
Susanne Mayr3
1Max-Planck Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2Columbia University, 3University
of Trier
63
Relating spontaneous and evoked measures of brain electrical activity
M. Schier & C. Stough
Swinburne University of Technology
64
Run/edit information processing mode and reaction time task
Tytus Sosnowski & Andrzej Rynkiewicz
University of Warsaw
65
Effects of forehead temperature stimulation on total respiratory resistance
Thomas Ritz1, Bernhard Dahme2, Miriam Thoens2, & Claus Wagner2
1University of London, 2University of Hamburg
66
Conditionability in trauma-exposed individuals with and without post traumatic
stress disorder
Scott Orr1, Linda Metzger1, Natasha Lasko1, Michael Macklin1, Tuvia Peri2,
& Roger Pitman1
1Manchester, N.H. VA Medical Center & Harvard Medical School, 2Hadassah
University Hospital & Hebrew University Medical School
67
Zygomaticus major activity is not a selective indicator of positive affective
state in ongoing interactive tasks
Arvid Kappas & Anna Pecchinenda
Laval University
68
The impact of competitive and collaborative instructions on appraisals and
physiological activity during dyadic interactions in a video game
Anna Pecchinenda & Arvid Kappas
Laval University
69
The significance of autonomic nervous system activity in functional dyspepsia
Eric Muth
Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory
70
Neuropsychological and electrophysiological measures of attention and executive
function in post-traumatic stress disorder
Janet L. Shucard, Danielle McCabe, Jeanine Sparks, & Herman Szymanski
State University of New York at Buffalo
71
Sex differences in ERPs and facial processing in prepubertal children
D. Erik Everhart, Janet L. Shucard, & David W. Shucard
State University of New York at Buffalo
72
Slow cortical potentials during the continuous performance task in attention-deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
Gudrun Sartory1,2, Bernhard Müller3, Angela Elvermann1, Edith Leifert1,
&
Arnfried Heine1
1University of Wuppertal, 2University of Jena, 3University of Essen
73
Prepulse modulation of startle eyeblink EMG and P50 sensory gating: Effects
of schizotypy syndromes
Jochen Kaiser1, Torsten Baldeweg2, John Ashcroft2, Samantha Adams2, &
John Gruzelier2
1University of Tübingen, 2Imperial College School of Medicine, London
74
Impaired respiratory sinus arrhythmia in patients with anxiety or toxic
solvent exposure
Stuart R. Steinhauer, Lisa A. Morrow, & Ruth Condray
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine/VAMC
75
The late positive potential as a marker of affective valence in supraliminal
and subliminal ERPs
Edward Bernat1, Scott Bunce2, & Howard Shevrin1
1University of Michigan, 2Ohio State University
76
Stimulus sequence-based expectancies are predominantly reflected in a centro-frontal
subcomponent of P300
Werner Sommer & Ines Jentzsch
Humboldt-University Berlin
77
Multiple bottlenecks in overlapping tasks? Evidence from the lateralized
readiness potential
Werner Sommer1, Hartmut Leuthold1, & Torsten Schubert2
1Humboldt-University Berlin, 2Max-Planck Institut für Neuropsychologische
Forschung, Leipzig
78
Larger late CNV amplitude and diminished distraction effects in long-term
practitioners of the Transcendental Meditation technique compared to short-term
practitioners and non-meditating subjects
Frederick Travis1 & Joseph J. Tecce2
1Maharishi University of Management, 2Boston College
79
A comparison of real-time telemetered EEG data from the UH-1 Huey helicopter
to the UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter
J.A. Caldwell, N.K. Smythe, C.F. Kelly, & K.A. Roberts
United States Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory
80
Helplessness, depressed mood, and physiological responsivity
Angela Scarpa
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
81
Murderers not guilty by reason of insanity and impulsive aggressive psychiatric
outpatients: An EEG/ERP comparison
Matthew S. Stanford, Kevin W. Greve, Charles W. Mathias, & Rebecca J. Houston
University of New Orleans
82
Electrodermal response to threat: Effects of sex, risk taking and antisocial
traits
Peter R. Finn, Alicia Justus, & Joseph Steinmetz
Indiana University
83
Effects of psychological stress on speech, heart rate, and neuroendocrine
responses
Victor L. Cestaro1, George A. Saviolakis2, Michael L. Koenig2, Debra L.
Yourick2, & James L. Meyerhoff2
1Department of Defense Polygraph Institute, 2Walter Reed Army Institute
of Research
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