M
Michael D. Rugg
Researcher at University of Texas at Dallas
Publications - 347
Citations - 40906
Michael D. Rugg is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Dallas. The author has contributed to research in topics: Episodic memory & Recognition memory. The author has an hindex of 105, co-authored 337 publications receiving 38447 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael D. Rugg include University of St Andrews & University of London.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Event-Related fMRI: Characterizing Differential Responses
Karl J. Friston,Paul C. Fletcher,Oliver Josephs,Andrew P. Holmes,Michael D. Rugg,Michael D. Rugg,Robert Turner +6 more
TL;DR: This paper focuses on bilateral ventrolateral prefrontal responses that show deactivations for previously seen words and activations for novel words in functional magnetic resonance imaging that are evoked by different sorts of stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI
Guidelines for using human event-related potentials to study cognition: Recording standards and publication criteria
Terence W. Picton,Shlomo Bentin,Patrick Berg,Emanuel Donchin,Steven A. Hillyard,Ray Johnson,Gregory A. Miller,Walter Ritter,Daniel S. Ruchkin,Michael D. Rugg,Margot J. Taylor +10 more
TL;DR: New guidelines for recording ERPs are presented and criteria for publishing the results are presented, which allow different studies to be compared readily.
Journal ArticleDOI
Event-related potentials and recognition memory
Michael D. Rugg,Tim Curran +1 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that ERP findings continue to offer strong support for the dual-process perspective, and the claim that the putative ERP index of familiarity is a reflection of implicit rather than explicit memory is examined.
Book
Electrophysiology of Mind: Event-Related Brain Potentials and Cognition
TL;DR: The ERP and cognitive psychology - conceptual issues, M.D.H. Rugg and M.G. Ruggle event-related potentials and language comprehension and mechanisms and models of selective attention, G.R. Mangun and S.A. Hillyard.
Journal ArticleDOI
Recollection and Familiarity in Recognition Memory: An Event-Related Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study
Richard N. Henson,Michael D. Rugg,Tim Shallice,Oliver Josephs,Raymond J. Dolan,Raymond J. Dolan +5 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that the responses of different brain regions do dissociate according to the phenomenology associated with memory retrieval, and both R and K judgments for studied words and N judgments for unstudied words were associated with enhanced responses.