Ž . International Journal of Psychophysiology 29 1998 83104 A spatio-temporal analysis of recognition-related event-related brain potentials Ray Johnson Jr. , Kurt Kreiter, Britt Russo, John Zhu Department of Psychology, Queens College CUNY, 65-30 Kissena Bl d., Flushing, NY 11367, USA Received 9 September 1997; revised 8 December 1997; accepted 6 January 1998 Abstract Ž . Words correctly recognized as previously studied i.e. old elicit greater amounts of positive event-related brain Ž . Ž . potential ERP activity over posterior scalp between 400 and 800 ms than do previously unstudied i.e. new words. While investigators have reported that this oldnew effect consists of more than one subcomponent, the spatio-tem- poral parameters of these possible subcomponents, as well as any other patterns of brain activity associated with recognition, remain incompletely specified. Thus, ERPs were recorded from 32 scalp sites while 13 subjects performed four repetitions of a study-test recognition paradigm. The subjects’ task was to decide whether each word was old or new and press the appropriate button as quickly as possible. The timing and topography of the ERPs elicited by old and new words was assessed with topographic profile comparisons on the areas with a variety of temporal windows, and visualized with potential and CSD maps. The results revealed that seven patterns of ERP activity, dissociable on the basis of their topography, timing and response to experimental variables, were elicited Ž between 300 and 2000 ms. Three of these appeared as subcomponents of the oldnew effect maximal over left . medial frontal, left parietal-occipital and right central-frontal scalp , another was related to decision confidence Ž . andor memory trace strength maximal over left central scalp and three others appeared to be related to more Ž . general aspects of recognition maximal over the frontal poles, midline frontal scalp and right frontal scalp . Taken together, the seven distinct patterns of neural generator activity described here support the hypothesis that retrieval of information from episodic memory depends on a collection of different processes that occur in a temporally and spatially distributed neural circuit. 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. Keywords: Episodic memory; Recognition memory; Event-related potentials; Oldnew effect Corresponding author. E-mail: Ray Johnson@qc.edu 0167-876098$19.00 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Ž . PII S0167-8760 98 00006-3