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Brief Communications

Is My Mobile Ringing? Evidence for Rapid Processing of a Personally Significant Sound in Humans

Anja Roye, Erich Schröger, Thomas Jacobsen and Thomas Gruber
Journal of Neuroscience 26 May 2010, 30 (21) 7310-7313; https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1113-10.2010
Anja Roye
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Erich Schröger
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Thomas Jacobsen
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Thomas Gruber
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    Figure 1.

    Time-frequency plot of the average stimulus-locked activity. Clear evoked gamma-band responses (40–100 ms; ∼35–75 Hz) were elicited in the passive and the active listening conditions (averaged across all 64 electrodes). The lowest panel shows a line plot that illustrates the differences in eGBRs for the different conditions: passive (P) and active (A), target (T) versus non-target (NT) for the personally significant sound (S) versus nonsignificant sound (NS).

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    Figure 2.

    VARETA source solutions for the eGBR effects. Coronal, axial and sagittal transparent outline views are presented. Statistically significant eGBR differences are depicted in light gray (p < 0.01) for the personally significant (S) versus nonsignificant (NS) sounds during the passive and active listening conditions and target (T) versus non-target (NT) sounds in the active condition (latency range: 40–100 ms).

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The Journal of Neuroscience: 30 (21)
Journal of Neuroscience
Vol. 30, Issue 21
26 May 2010
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Is My Mobile Ringing? Evidence for Rapid Processing of a Personally Significant Sound in Humans
Anja Roye, Erich Schröger, Thomas Jacobsen, Thomas Gruber
Journal of Neuroscience 26 May 2010, 30 (21) 7310-7313; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1113-10.2010

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Is My Mobile Ringing? Evidence for Rapid Processing of a Personally Significant Sound in Humans
Anja Roye, Erich Schröger, Thomas Jacobsen, Thomas Gruber
Journal of Neuroscience 26 May 2010, 30 (21) 7310-7313; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1113-10.2010
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