V
Vicente J. Iragui
Researcher at University of California, San Diego
Publications - 56
Citations - 6621
Vicente J. Iragui is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Temporal lobe & Verbal memory. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 56 publications receiving 6120 citations. Previous affiliations of Vicente J. Iragui include University of California, Davis & United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Removing electroencephalographic artifacts by blind source separation.
Tzyy-Ping Jung,Tzyy-Ping Jung,Scott Makeig,Colin Humphries,Te-Won Lee,Te-Won Lee,Martin J. McKeown,Vicente J. Iragui,Terrence J. Sejnowski,Terrence J. Sejnowski +9 more
TL;DR: The results on EEG data collected from normal and autistic subjects show that ICA can effectively detect, separate, and remove contamination from a wide variety of artifactual sources in EEG records with results comparing favorably with those obtained using regression and PCA methods.
Proceedings Article
Extended ICA Removes Artifacts from Electroencephalographic Recordings
Tzyy-Ping Jung,Colin Humphries,Te-Won Lee,Scott Makeig,Martin J. McKeown,Vicente J. Iragui,Terrence J. Sejnowski +6 more
TL;DR: The results show that ICA can effectively detect, separate and remove activity in EEG records from a wide variety of artifactual sources, with results comparing favorably to those obtained using regression-based methods.
Journal ArticleDOI
The N400 in a semantic categorization task across 6 decades.
Marta Kutas,Vicente J. Iragui +1 more
TL;DR: The N400 semantic congruity effect at the scalp gets smaller, slower and more variable with age, consistent with a quantitative rather than qualitative change in semantic processing (integration) with normal aging.
Journal ArticleDOI
Diffusion tensor imaging correlates of memory and language impairments in temporal lobe epilepsy.
Carrie R. McDonald,Mazyar E. Ahmadi,Donald J. Hagler,Evelyn S. Tecoma,Vicente J. Iragui,Lusineh Gharapetian,Anders M. Dale,Eric Halgren +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that structural compromise to multiple fiber tracts is associated with memory and language impairments in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and provide initial evidence that diffusion tensor imaging tractography may provide clinically unique information for predicting neuropsychological status in patientsWith epilepsy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Word repetition in amnesia. Electrophysiological measures of impaired and spared memory.
John M Olichney,Cyma Van Petten,Ken A. Paller,David P. Salmon,Vicente J. Iragui,Vicente J. Iragui,Marta Kutas +6 more
TL;DR: The preserved N400 repetition effect is an example of preserved memory in amnesia that does not easily fit into the categories of low-level perceptual processing or of motor learning, and may reflect a short-term memory process that serves language comprehension in realtime.