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Jordi Costa-Faidella

Researcher at University of Barcelona

Publications -  24
Citations -  1359

Jordi Costa-Faidella is an academic researcher from University of Barcelona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mismatch negativity & Auditory system. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 20 publications receiving 1190 citations. Previous affiliations of Jordi Costa-Faidella include Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research.

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On the bilingual advantage in conflict processing: Now you see it, now you don't

TL;DR: The results reveal that when the task at hand recruits a good deal of monitoring resources, bilinguals outperform monolinguals and suggests that bilingualism may affect the monitoring processes involved in executive control.
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Electrophysiological evidence for the hierarchical organization of auditory change detection in the human brain.

TL;DR: This finding implies that early change detection processes exist in humans upstream of MMN generation, which supports the emerging view of a hierarchical organization of change detection expanding along multiple levels of the auditory pathway.
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Interactions between “What” and “When” in the Auditory System: Temporal Predictability Enhances Repetition Suppression

TL;DR: It is shown that unpredictable stimulus timing abolishes the early part of the repetition positivity, an AEP indexing auditory sensory memory trace formation, while leaving the later part (∼>200 ms) unaffected, suggesting that timing predictability aids the propagation of repetition effects upstream the auditory pathway.
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Early change detection in humans as revealed by auditory brainstem and middle-latency evoked potentials.

TL;DR: The results suggest that auditory change detection of frequency information is a multistage process that occurs at the primary auditory cortex and is transmitted to the higher levels of the auditory pathway.
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Multiple time scales of adaptation in the auditory system as revealed by human evoked potentials

TL;DR: Recording human auditory evoked potentials to pure tones in a sequence embedding short- and long-term aspects of stimulus history yielded dynamic amplitude modulations of the P2 AEP to stimulus repetition spanning from milliseconds to tens of seconds concurrently, which enabled the auditory system to generate expectations of the incoming stimuli.