Updated Vita - Northwestern University



January, 2015

VITA

Name: Joel Peter Rosenfeld

Place of Birth: New York City, New York

Education:

B.A., 1959, Columbia College, New York City; Fields: Biology, Humanities

M.A., 1961, Columbia University, New York City; Field: English and Comp. Lit.

M.A., 1969, University of Iowa, Iowa City; Field: Psychology

Ph.D., 1971, University of Iowa, Iowa City; Field: Physiological Psychology

Honors:

NDEA Title IV Fellowship 1966-1969

USPHS Interdisciplinary Fellowship 1969-1970

Sigma Xi Society

NATO Symposium Award 1976

Citation Paper (11th Ann. Meeting Biofeedback Society of America, 1980)

Citation Paper (12th Ann. Meeting Biofeedback Society of America, 1981)

Research Recognition Award; Biofeedback Society of America, 1988

World Congress Scientific Committee Member, Int. Assoc. Psychophysiol., 2004,2012,2014,2016

Society Memberships:

AAAS, Society for Neuroscience, International Association for Study of Pain, American Psychological Society, Association for Applied Psychophysiology, American Psychological Association, American Pain Society, Society for Psychophysiological Research, American Polygraph Association, International Association for Psychophysiology

Professional Society Offices:

Board of Directors, Association for Applied Psychophysiology, 1985-1988

President, Association for Applied Psychophysiology, 1990-1991

President, Academy of Certified Neurotherapists, 1995-2000

Psychotherapy Training:

a) Coursework: University of Iowa, 1966-1968; Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis Continuing Education Program, 1974-1975.

b) Supervised Clinical Practicum: Northwestern University Student Health Service, Mental Health Department, Searle Hall, Evanston, IL., 1976-1979.

License:

State of Illinois: Registered Psychologist #72-1897, Licensed Clinical Psychologist #071- 001897

Experience:

Professor, Department Neurobiology and Physiology, Northwestern University, 1981-.

Professor, Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, 1979-.

Associate Professor, Psychology Department, Northwestern University, 1974-1979.

Joint Appointment with Psychiatry Department, Northwestern University School of Medicine, 1975-1980.

Assistant Professor, Psychology Department, Northwestern University, 1970-1974.

Instructor, Psychology Department of Iowa, 1969.

Consulting and Review Panels:

Associate editor, Int. J. Psychophysiology

Associate editor, Journal of Neurotherapy

Editorial Board:

Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 1985-1993,

International Journal of Psychophysiology, 1993-

Journal of Credibility assessment and Witness Psychology, 1990-

Applied Psychophysiology& Biofeedback, 1993-

Consulting Editor: Dryden Press, Prentice-Hall, Allyn and Bacon, Inc., NYU Press,

Science, LifeSciences, Physiology and Behavior, Psychophysiology, Brain Research, Experimental Neurology, Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior, Journal of Craniomandibular Disorders, Facial and Oral Pain, Int. J. Psychophysiol., Chemical Senses, Journal of Psychophysiology,The Lancet, Biological Psychology, Biological Psychiatry, Neuroimage, Neuroscience Letters, Applied Cognitive Psychology, Australian and New Zealand  Journal of Criminology, J. Cog. Neuroscience, Psychology, Crime and Law,

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied,

Journal of Neuroscience Methods,Clinical Neurophysiology, Behavioral Neuroscience,

Psychological Science, Psychological Bulletin,Learning and Motivation

Outside reviewer, National Science Foundation, 1975-, NIMH, 1977-, NAMRC (Canada) 1993-

Member of Panel of Assessors, National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, 1977-.

Member of Neurological Sciences Study Section, NIH, 1984-1987.

Reviewer: Israeli Science Foundation, 2000-present.

Presentations:

(1) Operant control of auditory evoked potentials in humans. Second Annual Winter Conference on Brain Research, Aspen, Colorado, 1969. (with A.P. Rudell and S.S. Fox)

(2) Discrete control of motor behavior by operant conditioning of evoked potentials. Tenth Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, San Antonio, Texas, 1970. (with S.S. Fox)

(3) Operant control of the central microcode for sensory and motor functions. Third Annual Winter Conference on Brain Research, Aspen, Colorado, 1971. (with s.S. Fox and A.P. Rudell)

(4) Operant validation of functional coding in evoked potentials in brain. Forty-third Annual Meeting, Midwestern Psychological Association, Detroit, Michigan, 1971. (with A.P. Rudell and S.S. Fox)

(5) Neural biofeedback. Fourth Annual Winter Conference on Brain.

(6) Evoked Potential Conditioning. Kroc-BIS Conference on the Autoregulation of the Electrical Activity of the Brain, San Ynez, California, 1972.

(7) Neural Conditioning and Novel Behavioral States. 73rd Annual Meeting, Canadian Psychological Association, Victoria, B.C., Canada, 1973.

(8) Evoked potential control and the central code for voluntary movement. Invited colloquium, Department of Psychology, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, 1973.

(9) Brain wave control as a novel phenomenon. Invited colloquium, Department of Psychiatry, Texas Tech School of Medicine, Lubbock, Texas, 1974.

(10) Hetzler, B.E., Rosenfeld, J.P., Birkel, P., Rudell, A.P. Operant control of central evoked potentials in unrestrained animals. Society for Neuroscience, NYC, N.Y., 1975.

(11) Rosenfeld, J.P. & Vickery, J.L. Independence of the lack of effect of morphine on central nociception from stimulus parameters.

(12) Unmediated Neural Conditioning. Invited colloquium, Illinois Pediatric Institute, March, 1976.

Presentations (cont'd):

(13) Operant control of central evoked potentials in animals with detailed analysis of ongoing body movements. Society for Psychophysiological Research, San Diego, 1976. (with Bruce Hetzler)

(14) On the mediation of evoked potential conditioning. Invited colloquium University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine, 1976.

(15) Mechanism of Opiate Analgesia. Invited colloquium at Lawrence University, Appleton, Wisconsin, October 28, 1977.

(16) Trigeminal Nuclear Lesions... Second World Congress on Pain, Int. Assoc. Study of Pain, Montreal, Canada, August, 1978.

(17) Operantly controlled evoked potentials in central pain pathways: Effects on nociception. (CITATION PAPER) 11th Ann. Meeting, Biofeedback Society of America, March 7-11, 1980, Colorado Springs, CO. (with M. Heinricher and R. Dowman)

(18) Differential effects of systemic versus microinjected opiates, etc. 2nd meeting, American Pain Society, N.Y., 1980. (with S. Stocco)

(19) Rostral (vs. caudal) trigeminal-thalamic projections and orofacial nociception. American Pain Society, N.Y., ;1980. (with J. Broton)

(20) Cortical and subcortical evoked potentials and nociception. American Pain Society, N.Y., 1980. (with R. Dowman, M. Heinricher)

(21) Feedback controlled pain-related cortical evoked potentials. Society for Psychophysical Research, 1980 meeting, Vancouver. (with R. Dowman)

(22) Duplication by Lanthanum of opiate effects. 10th Annual Meeting, Society for Neuroscience, Cincinnati, 1980. (with P. Kerestez-Nagy)

(23) Conditioning cortical pain-related evoked potentials affects nociception. 12th Annual meeting, Biofeedback Society of America, Louisville, 1981 (CITATION PAPER: with R. Dowman, M. Heinricher)

(24) Biofeedback of Event-Related Brain Potentials. Sixth International Congress on Event- Related Slow Potentials of the Brain, Chicago, 1981.

(25) Opiate mechanisms of pain inhibition. Universite' de Poitiers, Laboratoire de Neurophysiologie et Psychophysiologie, France, 1981.

(26) President's (of the American Dental Association) Conference on Dentist-Patient Relationships and Management of Anxiety and Fear. Invited lecture on "Behavioral management of pain,", 1982.

(27) Unique applications of evoked potential biofeedback. Second International Conference of Self-regulation of Brain Activity, Tubingen, West Germany, 1983.

(28) Operant control of pain-related neural activity. VII Bi-annual Event Related Potential International Conference, Florence, Italy, 1983.

(29) Brain wave conditioning and pain perception. Invited colloquium, University of Illinois, 1985.

(30) The effects of operant somatosensory evoked potential conditioning on pain perception in rats and humans. Invited symposium, Society for Psychophysiological Research, 1985, Houston, TX.

RECENT SELECTED PRESENTATIONS after 2005 . (74 more 1985-2005 not shown.)

31. Ming Lui & J.P. Rosenfeld Individual Diagnostic Deception test results based on P300 Scalp distribution with multiple mock crime issues. 45th Annual Meeting. Society for Psychophysiological Research, September, 2005, Lisbon, Portugal.

32. J. P. Rosenfeld , Ming Lui, & Katieann Skogsberg A Novel P300-based, Concealed Information Detector :Combined Probe and Target trials. 45th Annual Meeting. Society for Psychophysiological Research, September, 2005, Lisbon, Portugal.

33. Ming Lui & J.P. Rosenfeld. Countermeasure-proof, ERP-based Detection of Deception via Subliminal Priming. 46th Annual Meeting. Society for Psychophysiological Research, September, 2006, Vancouver, Canada

34. J. P. Rosenfeld The Complex Trial Protocol: A new Protocol for Deception Detection. 13th World Congress of Psychophysiology, Intern. Organization of Psychophysiology, August, 2006, Istanbul, Turkey.

35. Organized Panel/Symposium entitled “ Deception Detection in the 21st Century: Novel Methods,Sensors and Analyses.” 13th World Congress of Psychophysiology, Intern. Organization of Psychophysiology, August, 2006, Istanbul, Turkey.

36. J.P. Rosenfeld. The Complex Trial Protocol (CTP): A new, countermeasure-resistant, accurate P300-basedmethod for detection of concealed information. 47th Ann. Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. October, 2007, Savannah, Georgia.

37. J.P. Rosenfeld Co-organized symposium entitled, “Deception Detection: New Procedures and Techniques for the 21st Century. 47th Ann. Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. October, 2007, Savannah, Georgia.

38. Meixner, J. and Rosenfeld, J.P. A novel test of P300-based detection of concealed information, 20th Ann. Meeting, Association for Psychological Science. Chicago, May 22-25, May, 2008.

39. Winograd, M. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Mock crime application of the complex trial protocol P300 baed concealed information test. 20th Ann. Meeting, Association for Psychological Science. Chicago, May 22-25, 2008.

40. Rosenfeld, J.P. Symposium presentation, Enhancing the Complex Trial Protocol and detecting concealed information in a mock crime scenario. 14th WORLD CONGRESS OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY; INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, St.Petersburg, Russia, September 8 - 13, 2008

41. Labkovsky, E. & Rosenfeld, J.P. Enhancing the Complex Trial Protocol with explicit random responses. 48th Annual Meeting, Society for Psychophysiological Research, Austin, Texas, USA, October 1-5, 2008.

42. Winograd, M. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Mock Crime Application of the Complex Trial Protocol . 48th Annual Meeting, Society for Psychophysiological Research, Austin, Texas, USA, October 1-5, 2008.

43. Haynes, A., Labkovsky, E. & Rosenfeld, J.P. A Modified Complex Trial Protocol P300 Test with Random Responses. 48th Annual Meeting, Society for Psychophysiological Research, Austin, Texas, USA, October 1-5, 2008.

44. Meixner, J., & Rosenfeld, J.P. The Omit Response in a Novel Test of P300-

Based Detection of Concealed Information. 48th Annual Meeting, Society for Psychophysiological Research, Austin, Texas, USA, October 1-5, 2008.

45. Verschuere, B., Rosenfeld, J.P., Winograd, M., Labkovsky, E., & Wiersema, R.The Role of Deception in the P300-Based

Concealed Information Test. 48th Annual Meeting, Society for Psychophysiological Research, Austin, Texas, USA, October 1-5, 2008.

46. Labkovsky & Rosenfeld (2009) Accuracy of the P300-based complex trial protocol for detection of deception as a function of number of countered irrelevant stimuli. Poster presented at 49th Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. Berlin, Germany

47. Meixner, J.B. & Rosenfeld, J.P.(2009) Identifying Terrorist Information Using the P300 ERP Component. Poster presented at 49th Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. Berlin, Germany.

48. Sokolovsky, A. W., Rothenberg, J., Meixner,J.B., & Rosenfeld, J. P. (2009) Sequential versus Simultaneous Stimulus Acknowledgement and Countermeasure Responses in P300-based Detection of Deception. Poster presented at 49th Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. Berlin, Germany.

49. Labkovsky, Elena B., Rosenfeld, J. Peter, & Sokolovsky, Alex (2009). Putative Novel ERP Component (P900) as an Indicator of Countermeasure Use in a Modified Complex Trial Protocol. Poster presented at 49th Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Berlin Germany .

50. Rosenfeld, J.P. (2009) The New, Countermeasure-Resistant P300-based Test for Detection of Deception. Invited Lecture. 14th Biennial Conference, Int. Soc. For study of Individual Differences, Evanston, Il.

51. Rosenfeld, J.P. (2009) The Complex Trial Protocol in Detection of Deception and Malingering. Invited Lecture. 17th Ann. Meeting, Int. Soc. for Neurofeedback Research. Indianapolis, Indiana.

52. Labkovsky, E. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2009) P300-Based Protocol (with Acoustic Stimuli) for Assessing Memory Deficit, Malingering, and Deception in Clinical and Forensic Settings. 17th Ann. Meeting, Int. Soc. for Neurofeedback Research. Indianapolis, Indiana.

53. Labkovsky & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011) A novel “dual probe” P300-based complex trial protocol for detection of concealed information. Poster presented at 51th Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. Boston, Mass.

54. Winograd, M.R., Labkovsky, E., Noriega, A., Lamano, J., & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011) One for all versus one for each in the P300-based compolex trial protocol for detection of concealed information. Poster presented at 51th Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. Boston, Mass.

55. Noble, R.H., Rosenfeld, J.P., & Chun, D. (2011) The extent of extensive countermeasure practice on the P300-based compolex trial protocol for detection of concealed information. Poster presented at 51th Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. Boston, Mass.

56. Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011) A New, Countermeasure-Resistant, Accurate P300-based Method for Detection of Concealed Information: Enhancements. Symposium Presentation, American Psychology-Law Society, 45th International Conference, Miami, Florida.

57. Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011). A P300-based test for identifying future terrorist activity. Symposium Presentation, 51th Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. Boston, Mass.

58. Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011). The complex trial protocol in detection of concealed information. Invited Presentation, Stanford University, Law and Memory Conference.

59. Labkovsky, E. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011), Memory deficit and malingering: An ERP-based assessment with a “Dual-Probe” Protocol and countermeasure use. Poster presented at 2011 Conference of International Society of Neurofeedback Research, Phoenix, Arizona.

60. Labkovsky & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2012) Detection of concealed information a mock crime scenario with a novel dual probe complex trial protocol with pictorial stimuli. Poster presented at 52nd Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. New Orleans, La.

61. Winograd, M.R., & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2012) Ecological validity and countermeasure mechanisms in P300 concealed information tests. Poster presented at 52nd Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. New Orleans, La.

62. Hu, X. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2012) Combining the P300 complex trial protocol and the reaction-time-based autobiographical implicit association test in concealed memory detection. Poster presented at 52nd Ann. Meeting, Society for Psychophysiolological Research. New Orleans, La.

63. Rosenfeld, J.P., Hu, X, & Labkovsky, E. (2012) Title: Enhancements to the Complex Trial Protocol. 16th World Congress of Psychophysiology, September 13-17, Pisa, Italy.

64. Winograd, M. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2012) Countermeasure Mechanisms in the Complex Trial Protocol. 16th World Congress of Psychophysiology, September 13-17, Pisa, Italy.

65. Invited lecture, Sept 11, 2012: “Detection of deceptively concealed information.” University of Tubingen, Germany, Departments of Medical Psychology and Neurobiology.

66. Rosenfeld, J.P. Invited presentation Jan 26,27, 2013 , “The P300 event-related potential in detection of concealed information, criminal and terror acts, malingering, and false memories, Biofeedback Society of Florida & Assoc. for Applied Psychophysiology, Orlando, Florida.

67. Xiaoqing Hu & Rosenfeld, J.P.The effect of memory suppression on ERP-based concealed memory detection. Poster presented at 54rd Ann. Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Atlanta, Georgia, September, 2014.

68. Labkovsky, E. & Rosenfeld, J.P. Dual-Probe complex trial protocol II reversed part order from 2013. Poster presented at 54rd Ann. Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Atlanta, Georgia, September, 2014.

69. Labkovsky, E. & Rosenfeld, J.P. Dual-Probe ERP Protocol in Assessment of Memory Deficit and Malingering: Comparing ERP Responses to Pictorial and Verbal Stimuli. Poster presented at 45th Ann. Meeting of Assoc. Applied Psychophysiology. Savannah, Georgia, March, 2014. (Winner of Citation Paper award.)

PUBLICATIONS

Publication Article:

(1) (1) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Rudell, A.P. On the validity of scalp recordings of the auditory evoked potential. Perception and Psychophysics, 1969, 6, 102-104.

(2) (2a) Rosenfeld, J.P., Rudell, A.P., and Fox, S.S. Operant control of neural events in humans. Science, 1969, 165, 821-823.

(3) b) Operant control of neural events in humans, completely reprinted in Barber et. al. (Eds.), Biofeedback and Self-Control, Chicago: Aldine and Atherton, 1971, 365-372.

(4) (3)Fox, S.S. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Recording evoked potentials. In: R.D. Myers (Ed.), Methods in Psychobiology, London: Academic Press, 1972.

(5) (4) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Fox, S.S. Movement-related macropotentials in cat cortex. Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1972, 32, 75-80.

(6) (5)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Fox, S.S. Operant control of a brain potential evoked by a behavior. Physiology and Behavior, 1971, 7, 489-494.

(7) (6)Rosenfeld, J.P. Evoked potential conditioning in neuroscience research. In: M. Chase (Eds.), Operant Control of Brain Activity, (Perspectives in the Brain Sciences, Vol. II), Brain Information Service, Brain Research Institute, UCLA, 1974.

(8) (7)Fox, S.S., Rudell, A.P., and Rosenfeld, J.P. The operant controlled neural event: A formal and systematic approach to electrical coding of electrical activity in behavior states. Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology, 1970, 28, 422.

(9) (8)Rosenfeld, J.P., Bieneman, T., Cohen, R., & Routtenberg, A. Effects of rewarding and aversive brain stimulation on photic cortical evoked potentials. Physiology and Behavior, 1972, 9, 527, 532.

(10) (9a)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Owen, R.L. Instrumental conditioning of photic evoked potentials: Mechanisms and properties of late component modification. Physiology and Behavior, 1972, 9, 851-858.

(11) ( 9 b)Instrumental conditioning of photic evoked potentials:Mechanism

and properties of late component modification, completely reprinted in N.

Miller et. al. (Eds.), Biofeedback and Self-Control 1973. Chicago: Aldine

Publishing Co., 1974, 77-95.

(12) (10a) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Fox, S.S. Sequential representation of

voluntary movement in cortical macropotential: Direct control of behavior by

operant conditioning of wave amplitude. Journal of Neurophysiology, 1972,

35, 879-891.

(13) (10b) Sequential representation of voluntary movement in cortical

macropotential: Direct control of behavior by operant conditioning of wave

amplitude, completely reprinted in D. Shapiro et. al. (Eds.), Biofeedback and

Self-Control 1972. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co., 1973, 339-352.

(14) (11a) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Hetzler, B.E. Operant controlled evoked responses: Discrimination of conditioned and normally occurring components. Science, 1973, 181, 767-770.

(15) (11b) Operant controlled evoked responses: Discrimination of conditioned and normally occurring components, completely reprinted in N. Miller et. al. (Eds.), Biofeedback and Self-Control 1973. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co., 1974, 71-76.

(16) (12) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Hetzler, B.E. Discrimination versus conditioning of photic cortical potentials. Physiology and Behavior, 1973, 11, 753-765.

(17) (13)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Rudell, A.P. Mediation of operant controlled neural activity. In: D. Mustovsky (Ed.), Behavior Control and Modification of Physiological Activity, New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1976.

(18) (14) Rosenfeld, J.P. Conditioning changes in the evoked response. In: G.E. Schwartz and J. Beatty (Eds.), Biofeedback: Theory and Research. New York: Academic Press, 1977, 377-388.

(19) (15) Ruth, R., Rosenfeld, J.P., Harris, D., and Birkel, P. Effects of aversive and rewarding electrical brain stimulation on auditory evoked responses in albino rat tectum. Physiology and Behavior, 1974, 13, 729-735.

(20) (16a) Rosenfeld, J.P., Hetzler, B.E., & Kosnik, W. Operant photic evoked potential control, unmediated by selective orientation. Physiology and Behavior, 1974, 13, 479-482.

(21) (16b) Operant photic evoked potential control, unmediated by selective orientation completely reprinted in Biofeedback and Self-Control: 1974. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co., 1975.

(22) (17)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Kowatch, R. Differential effect of morphine on central versus peripheral nociception. Brain Research, 1975, 88, 181-185.

(23) (18)Hetzler, B.E., Rosenfeld, J.P., Ripekj, A., and Kosnik, W. Factors affecting planktonic behavior in Hydra Viridus. American Midland Naturalist, 1975, 94, 462-468.

(24) (19a) Rosenfeld, J.P., Hetzler, B.E., Birkel, P., Antoinetti, D., and Kowatch, R. Operant conditioned potentials, centrally evoked at random intervals. Behavioral Biology, 1976, 16, 305-317.

(25) (19b) Operant conditioned potentials, centrally evoked at random intervals, completely reprinted in J. Kamiya et. al. (Eds.), Biofeedback and Self-Control: 1976/77. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co., 1977.

(26) (20)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Vickery, J.L. Differential effects of morphine on trigeminal nucleus versus reticular aversive stimulation: Independence of negative effects from stimulation parameters. Pain, 1976, 2, 405-416.

(27) (21)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Holzman, B.S. Differential effect of morphine on stimulation of primary versus higher order trigeminal terminals. Brain Research, 1977, 124, 367-372.

(28) (22) Ruth, R.E. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Dependence of photic cortical effects of aversive central gray stimulation on reticular activation. International J. Neuroscience, 1977, 7, 165-173.

(29) (23) Ruth, R.A. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Tonic reticular activating system: Relationship to aversive brain stimulation effects. Experimental Neurology, 1977, 57, 41-56.

(30) (24a) Hetzler, B.E., Rosenfeld, J.P., Birkel, P.A., and Antoinetti, D.N.

Characteristics of operant control of centrally evoked potentials in rats.

Physiology and Behavior, 1977, 19, 527-534.

(31) (24b) Characteristics of operant control of centrally evoked potentials

in rats, completely reprinted in Biofeedback and Self-Control: 1977-1978.

Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co., Inc. Press, 1978.

Publication Article (cont'd)

(32) (25) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Holzman, B.S. Effects of morphine on medial thalamic and medial bulboreticular aversive stimulation thresholds. Brain Research, 1978, 150, 436-440.

(33) (26) Rosenfeld, J.P., Broton, J.G., and Clavier, R.M. A reliable facial nociception device for unrestrained awake animals. Physiology and Behavior, 1978, 21, 287-290.

(34) (27)Rosenfeld, J.P., Clavier, R.M., and Broton, J.G. Bilateral and unilateral antinociceptive effects of rostral trigeminal nuclear complex lesions in rats. Brain Research, 1978, 157, 147-152.

(35) (28)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Hetzler, B.E. Significance and mediation of neural and other biofeedback. International Journal of Neuroscience, 1979, 8, 233-250.

(36) (29)Hetzler, B.E., Rosenfeld, J.P., and Birkel, P.A. Analysis of body movements during operant control of central evoked potentials. Physiology and Behavior, 1978, 21, 1047-1050.

(37) (30)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Rice, P.E. Diurnal rhythms in nociceptive thresholds in rats. Physiology and Behavior, 1979, 23, 419-420.

(38) (31)Rosenfeld, J.P. and Rice, P.E. Effects of naloxone on aversive trigeminal and thalamic stimulation, and on peripheral nociception: A hypothesis of selective action and variability in naloxone testing. Brain Research, 1979, 178, 609-612.

(39) (32a) Rosenfeld, J.P., Heinricher, M., and Dowman, R. Operantly controlled evoked potentials in central pain pathways. In Consolidation and New Dimensions: Proceedings of Biofeedback Society of America 11th Ann. Meet., 1980. Denver: Biofeedback Society, p. 138-141.

(40) (32b)Operantly controlled evoked potentials in central pain pathways. Reprinted in Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 1980, 5, 160-164.

(41) (33) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Keresztes-Nagy, P. Differential effects of intracerebrally microinjected enkephalin analogs on centrally versus peripherally induced pain, and evidence for a facial versus lower body analgesic effect. Pain, 1980, 9, 171-182.

(42) (34) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Stocco, S. Differential effects of systemic versus intracranial injection of opiates on central, orofacial and lower body nociception: Somatotypy in bulbar analgesia systems. Pain, 1980, 9, 307-318.

(43) (35) Keresztes-Nagy, P. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Naloxone-reversible duplication by lanthanum of differential opiate analgesic effects on orofacial versus lower body versus central nociception. Brain Research, 1981, 208, 234-239.

(44) (36) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Stocco, S. Effects of midbrain, bulbar, and combined morphine microinjections and systemic injections on orofacial nociception and rostral trigeminal stimulation: Independent midbrain and bulbar opiate analgesia system? Brain Research, 1981, 215, 342-348.

(45) (37) Rosenfeld, J.P., Stamm, J., Roger, M., Birbaumer, N., Rockstroh, B., and Elbert, T. Biofeedback of event-related potentials. In: Karrer, R., Cohen, J., and Tueting, P. (Eds.), Brain and Information: Event-Related Potentials, Proc. VI Int. Conf. on Event-Related Slow Potentials of the Brain. N.Y. Acad. Sci., Monograph #12, 1983, 653-666.

(46) (38) Heinricher, M.M., Rosenfeld, J.P., and Dowman, R. Operant conditioning of trigeminal nuclear evoked potentials. Brain Research Bulletin, 1981, 7, 353-358.

(47) (39) Rosenfeld, J.P., Pickrel, C., and Broton, J.G. Analgesia for orofacial nociception produced by morphine microinjection into the trigeminal complex. Pain, 1983, 15, 145-155.

(48) (40) Dowman, R.J., Rosenfeld, J.P., and Heinricher, M. Operant conditioning of trigeminally evoked cortical potentials: Correlated effects on facial nociception. Brain Research, 1983, 269, 111-118.

(49) (41) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Gribben, D. A new, reliable lower body nociception device for unrestrained animals. Physiology and Behavior, 1983, 31, 1-6.

(50) (42) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Hammer, M. Antagoanism of opiate-like, lanthanum-induced analgesia by naloxone, 2 mg/kg, in rats. Brain Research, 1983, 268, 189-191.

(51) (43) Rosenfeld, J.P. Behavioral management of pain: Operant conditioning of pain-related neural activity. In: R. Moretti and W.A. Ayers, (Eds.), The President's Conference on the Dentist-Patient Relationship. American Dental Association, Chicago: 1983, 68-72.

(52) (44) Rosenfeld, J.P., Diaz-Clark, A., and Olson, R.E. Response to painful electrical stimulation in MPD Syndrome Patients. Journal of Dental Research, 1983, 62, 259-260.

(53) (45) Rosenfeld, J.P., Diaz-Clark, A., and Olson, R.E. MPD Syndrome patient response to aversive heat and aversive sound. Journal of Dental Research, 1983, 62, 249-259.

(54) (46) Rosenfeld, J.P., Dowman, R., Heinricher, M., and Silvia, R. Operantly controlled somatosensory evoked potentials: Specific effects on pain processes. In: Self-Regulation of the Brain and Behavior, Ed. by B. Rockstroh, T. Elbert, W. Lutzenberger and N. Birbaumer, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1984, pp. 164-179.

(55) (47) Broton, J.G. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Rostral trigeminal projections signal perioral facial pain. Brain Research, 1982, 243, 395-400.

(56) (48) Heinricher, M.M. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Microinjection of morphine into nucleus reticularis paragigantocellularis of the rat supresses spontaneous activity of nucleus raphe magnus. Brain Research, 1983, 272, 382-386.

(57) (49) Rosenfeld, J.P., Silvia, R., Weitkunat, R., and Dowman, R. Operant Control of Human Somatosensory Evoked Response Alters Experimental Pain Perception. Advances in Neurology, Vol. 9, (Raven Press), 1985, 343-348.

(58) (50) Dowman, R. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Operant conditioning of somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) in rats. I. Specific changes in SEP amplitude and a naloxone-reversible, somatotopically sepcific change in facial nociception. Brain Research, 333 (1985) 201-212.

(59) (51) Dowman, R. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Operant conditioning of somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) in rats. II. Associated changes in reflex and continuous non-timelocked movements. Brain Research, 333 (1985) 213-222.

(60) (52) Broton, J.G. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Effects of Trigeminal Tractotomy on Facial Thermal Nociception in the Rat. Brain Research, 333 (1985) 63-72.

(61) (53) Dowman, R. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Evidence for opioid modulation of innocuous somatosensory activity. Experimental Neurology, 89 (1985) 9-23.

Publication

Article (cont'd)

(62) (54) Heinricher, M.M. and Rosenfeld, J. Peter. Microinjection of morphine into nucleus reticularis pargigantocellularis of the rat: Preferential supression of spontaneous, rather than noxious evoked, activity of nucleus raphe magnus neurons. Brain Res., 359 (1985), 388-391.

(63) (55) Kasman, G. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Differential effect of microinjected versus systemically administered morphine does not depend on dose or behavioral test. Brain Res., 383 (1986), 271-278.

(64) (56) Weitkunat, R. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Pain control by biofeedback of somatosensory evoked potentials. In: Topics in Behavioral Medicine, edited by Vinck et al. Berwyn: Swets North America Inc., 1986, 31-47.

(65) (57) Rosenfeld, J.P. The response of individual nucleus raphe magnus neurons to microinjections of met-enkephalin at midbrain and at bulbar loci: Evidence for midbrain-bulbar convergence on individual raphe neurons. Int. J. Neurosc., 33, 1987, 165-173.

(66) (58) Pickoff, J., Broton, J., and Rosenfeld, J.P. Lesions of the mid-spinal trigeminal complex are effective in producing perioral thermal hypoalgesia. Brain Res., 382 (1986), 291-198.

(67) (59) Broton, J. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Cutting rostral trigeminal nuclear complex projections preferentially affects perioral nociception in the rat. Brain Res., 397 (1986), 1-8.

(68) (60a) Rosenfeld, J.P., et al. Late vertex positivity as a guilty knowledge indicator: A new method of lie detection. Int. J. Neurosc., 34, 1987, 125-129.

(69) (60 b)Late vertex positivity etc. Completely reprinted in Polygraph, December, 1987.

(70) (61) Douros, C., Karrer, R., and Rosenfeld, J.P. Effects of attention and slow potential shifts on self-regulation of event-related potentials. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 12, 1987, 39-50.

(71) (62) Broton, J.G. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Automated tests of facial somatic sensation in the awake, minimally-restrained rat. Applicability for use in long-term deafferentation studies. In: Effects of Injury on Spinal and Trigeminal Somatosensory Systems, L.M. Pubols and B.J. Sessle (Eds.), A.R. Liss, NY, 1987.

(72) (63) Rosenfeld, J.P. Can Clinical Biofeedback be Clinically Validated? Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 12, 1987, 217-222.

(73) (64) Rosenfeld, J.P. et al. A modified, event-related potential-based guilty knowledge test. Int. J. Neurosc., 42, 1988, 157-161.

(74) (65) Rosenfeld, J.P. Response to Stowell. Int. J. Neurosc., 42, 1988, 163-165.

(75) (66) Rosenfeld, J.P. Pain and Analgesia Mechanisms in SelRF

Regulation and Health ed. by J. Carlson and R. Siefert, N.Y.: Plenum, 1991,

239-254.

(76) (67) Xia, L.Y. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Acupuncture mechanisms in Self Regulation and Health, ed. by J. Carlson and R. Siefert, N.Y.: Plenum, 1991, 267-279.

(77) (68) Nasman, V.T. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Parietal P3 amplitude as an indicator of response categorization. Psychophysiology, 27, 1990, 338-350.

Publication Article (cont'd)

(78) (69) Rosenfeld, J.P. Real time processing of event related potentials.

In: Digital Signal Processing, ed. by R. Weitkunat, Amsterdam:

Elsevier,1991,279-290.

(79) (70) Rosenfeld, J.P. Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback of Event-Related Potentials (Brain Waves): Historical Perspective, Review, Future Directions. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 15, 1990, 99-120.

(80) (71) Rosenfeld, J.P., Huang, K.H., and Xia, L.Y. Effects of single and

simultaneous combined nanoinjections of met-enkephalin into rat midbrain

and medulla on activity of differentially noci-responsive ventral medullary

neurons. Brain Research, 508, 1990, 199-209.

(81) (72) Xia, L.Y. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Effects of single nanoinjections of Met-enkephalin in the minimally anaesthetized rat brainstem on trigeminal nuclear neurons. Brain Research, 541, 1991, 181-192.

(82) (73) Rosenfeld, J.P., Angell, A., Johnson, M., and Qian, J. An ERP-based control-question lie detector analog: Algorithms for discriminating effects within individual waveforms. Psychophysiology, 28, 1991, 320-336.

(83) (74) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Kim, M. Ongoing pain as a mental workload

indexed by P300 depression: Discrimination of real and feigned pain

conditions. Psychophysiology, 28, 1991, 336-343.

(84) (75) Rosenfeld, J.P. The P3 event-related brain potential in

psychiatric and neurological diagnosis in Clinical Applied Psychophysiology,

edited by J. Carlson and R. Siefert, Plenum, 1994.

(85) (76) Rosenfeld, J.P. New Directions in Applied Psychophysiology. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 17 1992, 77-88.

(86) (77) Nasman, V.T. and Rosenfeld, J.P. Taking attention to task: Task response probability, and within category deviation detection. Psychophysiology, 29, 1992, 657-663.

(87) (78) Huang, K., Xia, L.Y., and Rosenfeld, J.P. Effects of Acupuncture on activity of nociresponsive trigeminal nucleus caudalis. Acupuncture Research, 4, 1990, 274-279.

(88) (79) Xia, L.H., Huang, K.H., and Rosenfeld, J.P. Behavioral and trigeminal neuronal effects of rat brainstem-nanoinjected opiates. Physiology and Behavior, 52, 1992, 65-73.

(89) (80) Johnson, M.M. and Rosenfeld, J.P. A new ERP-based deception detector analog II: Utilization of non-selective activation of relevant knowledge. Int. J. Psychophysiology, 12, 1992, 289-306.

(90) (81) Rosenfeld, J.P., et al. Event-related potentials in the dual task paradigm: P300 discriminates engaging and non-engaging films when film-viewing is the primary task. Int. J. Psychophysiol, 12, 1992, 221-332.

(91) (82) Rosenfeld, J.P. EEG treatment of addictions: Commentary on Ochs, Peniston and Kulkowsky in Biofeedback, 20, 1992, 12-17.

(92) (83) Rosenfeld, J. Peter and Xia, L.Y. Reversible tetracaine block of

rat periaqueductal gray (PAG) decreases baseline tail-flick latency and

prevents analgesic effects of met-enkephalin injections in nucleus

paragigantocellularis (PGC). Brain Research, 605, 1993, 57-66.

Publication Article (cont'd)

(93) (84) Rosenfeld, J.P., Johnson, M.M., and Koo, J.K. Ongoing ischemic pain as a workload indexed by P3 amplitude and latency. Psychophysiology, 30, 1993, 253-260.

(94) (85) Liephardt, J., Rosenfeld, J.P., and Gabrielli, J. Event-related potential correlates of implicit priming and explicit memory tasks. Int. J. Psychophysiology, 15, 1993, 197-206.

(95) (86) Douros, C., Karrer, R., and Rosenfeld, J.P. The self-regulation of slow potential shifts and evoked potentials. Int. J. Psychophysiology, 16, 1994, 69-80.

(96) (87) Rosenfeld, J.P. Alternative views of Bashore and Rapp's (1993) alternatives to traditional polygraphy. Psychological Bulletin, 117, 1995, 159-166.

(97) (88) Rosenfeld, J.P. Biofeedback of brain wave activity: models,

mechanisms, effects. In J. Kamiya, R. Kall, and G. Schwartz (eds.), Brain

wave biofeedback and applied neurophysiology. Trevose, PA: Futurehealth

Publishers, 1997, in press.

(98) (89) Willard, J., Johnson, M.M., and Rosenfeld, J.P. Interaction of oddball probability and task type on P300 amplitude. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 19, 1994, 13-24.

(99) (90) Rosenfeld, J.P., and Xia, L.Y. Lacks of effects of tetracaine in rat nucleus paragigantocellularis on analgesia. Int. J. Neuroscience, 74, 1994, 161-175.

(100) (91) Rosenfeld, J.P. Interacting brain stem components of opiate

activated, descending, pain-inhibitory systems. Neuroscience and

Biobehavioral Reviews, 18 (1994) 403-409.

(101) (92) Rosenfeld, J.P., Ellwanger, J., and Sweet, J. Detecting simulated amnesia with event-related brain potentials. Int. J. Psychhophysiol., 19, 1995, 1-11.

(102) (93) Rosenfeld, J.P., Cha, G., Blair, T., and Gotlib, I. Operant control of left-right frontal alpha power differences. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 20, 1995, 241-258.

(103) (94) Rosenfeld, J.P. (1997) Novel approaches in neurotherapy-neurofeedback; asymmetry manipulation via feedback or stimulation: In Moss, D. ed. Biofeedback: The evolving field of EEG feedback. Biofeedback, 25, 8-26.

(104) (95) Rosenfeld, J.P., Reinhart, A., and Srivastava, S. The effects of

alpha (10 Hz) and Beta (22 Hz) "entrainment" stimulation on the alpha and

beta EEG bands. Applied Psychophysiology & Biofeedback, 1997, 1, 3-20.

(105) (96) Rosenfeld, J.P., Sweet, J.J., Chuang, J., Ellwanger, J., and Song, L. Detection of simulated malingering using forced choice recognition enhanced with event-related potential recording. The Clinical Neuropsychologist, 1996, 10, 163-179.

(106) (97) Taub, E., and Rosenfeld, J.P. Is alpha-theta training the effective

component of the alpha-theta therapy package for treatment of alcoholism?

Biofeedback, 22, 1994, 12-14.

(107) (98) Rosenfeld, J.P.., Baehr, E., Baehr, R., Gotlib, I., and Ranganath, C. (1996) Daily changes in frontal alpha asymmetry correlate with changes in affect in therapy sessions. Int. J. Psychophysiol., 23, 37-41.

(108) (99) Ellwanger, J.W., Rosenfeld, J.P., Sweet, J., & Bhat, M. (1996). Detecting simulated amnesia for autobiographical and recently learned information using the P300 event-related potential. Int. J. Psychophysiology, 23, 9-23.

(109) (100) Gotlib, I.A., Ranganath, C., & Rosenfeld, J.P. (1998). Frontal EEG alpha asymmetry, depression, and cognitive functioning. Cognition and Emotion, 12,449-478.

Publication Article (cont'd)

(110) (101) Ellwanger, J.E., Rosenfeld, J.P., & Sweet, J.J. (1997). P300 Event-related Brain Potential as an Index of Recognition Response to Autobiographical and Recently Learned Information in Closed-Head Injury Patients. The Clinical Neuropsychologist, 11, 428-432.

(111) (102) Rosenfeld, J.P. A research odyssey: my years in neuroscience. Biofeedback, 23 (1995) 6-15.

(112) (103) Rosenfeld, J.P., Reinhart, A.M., Bhatt, M., Ellwanger, J., Gora,

K., Sekera, M., & Sweet, J. (1998). P300 correlates of simulated amnesia on a

matching-to-sample task: Topographic analyses of deception vs. truth-telling

responses. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 28, 233-248.

(113) (104) Rosenfeld, J.P., Ellwanger, J.W., Nolan, K., Wu, S., Bermann, &

Sweet, J.J(1999). P300 scalp amplitude distribution as an index of deception

in a simulated cognitive deficit model. Int. J. Psychophysiol.,33,3-19.

(114) (105) Ellwanger, J.W., Tenhula, W., Rosenfeld, J.P., & Sweet, J.J.

(2000). Identifying simulators of cognitive deficit through combined use of

neuropsychological test performance and Event-Related Potentials. J. Clin.

And Exp. Neuropsychology, 21, 866-879.

(115) (106) Ellwanger, J., Rosenfeld, J. P., Hankin, B.L., & Sweet, J.J. (1999).P300 asan index of recognition in a standard and difficult match-to-sample test: A model of amnesia in normal adults. The Clinical Neuropsychologist, 13,101-109.

(116) (107)Hoffman, D.A., Lubar, J., Rosenfeld, J.P. et al. (1999).

Limitations of the American Academy of Neurology and American Clinical

Neurophysiology Society paper on QEEG. J. of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical

Neurosciences, 11, 401-403.

(117) (108) Rosenfeld, J.P. (2000). An EEG biofeedback protocol for

affective disorders, Clinical Electroencephalography, 31, 7-12.

118) (109) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Ellwanger, J.W. (1999). Cognitive

psychophysiology indetection of malingered cognitive deficit. In J.J.

Sweet (Ed.) ForensicNeuropsychology, Lisse (Switzerland): Swets &

Zeitlinger, publishers, pp. 287-312.

119) (110) Rosenfeld, J.P. (2002). Event-related potentials in detection of

deception,malingering, and false memories. In (Murray Kleiner, ed.

Handbook of Polygraphy,N.Y.: Academic Press.

(120) (111) Rosenfeld, J.P. (1999). Applied Psychophysiology: Exclusions and Inclusions.Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, 24, 33-35.

(121) (112) Baehr, E., Rosenfeld, J.P., Baehr, R., & Earnest, C. (1999).

Clinical use of analpha asymmetry neurofeedback protocol in the treatmentof

mood disorders. In (J.R.

Evans, ed.) Introduction to Quantitative EEG and Neurofeedback. N.Y.:

Academic Press, 181-201

(122) (113) Rosenfeld, J.P. (2001). Theoretical implications of EEG

referencing andrelated methodology issues. J. Neurotherapy, 4,77-87.

(123) (114) Sweet, J.J., Wolfe, P., Rosenfeld, J.P. et al. (2000)

Further investigation of traumatic brain injury versus insufficient effort with

the California Verbal LearningTest. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology,

15, 105-113

(124) (115) Miller, A.R., Rosenfeld, J.P., & Baratta, C. (2001)

Amplitude distributions and latency in illusory recognition. J.

ExperimentalPsychology (Learningand Memory),27, 354-361.

125) (116) Soskins, M., Rosenfeld, J.P., & Niendam, T. (2001). The

case for peak-to-peakmeasurement of P300 recorded at .3 hz high pass filter settings in detection ofdeception. Int. J. Psychophysiology,40, 173-180.

126) (117) Miller, A.R., Rosenfeld, J.P., et al. (2002). P300 amplitude and

Topography distinguish between honest performance and feigned amnesia in an autobiographical oddball task. J. Psychophysiology,16,1-11.

127) (118) Baehr, E., Rosenfeld, J.P., Baehr, R., and Earnest, C.(2002)

J Neurotherapy

Clinical use of an alpha asymmetry neurofeedback protocol in the treatment of mood disorders: Follow-up study one to five years post-treatment

(128) (119) Rosenfeld, J.P., and Baehr, E. (2002). Mood Disorders, In:

Handbook for Mind Body Medicine for Primary Care. Edited by Moss, D.,

McGrady, A.,Wickramasekera, I., & Davies, T. Sage Press.

129) (120) Rosenfeld, J.Peter, Rao, Archana, Soskins, M., and Miller,

A.R. (2002) P300 Scalp Distribution as an Index of Deception: Control for Task Demand. Journal of Credibility Assessment and Witness Psychology. 3 (1) 1-22. [Internet Journal]

(130) (121) Miller A.R., Rosenfeld, J.P.,Soskins,M., & Jhee, M.(2002) P300 amplitude and Topography in an Autobiographical Oddball Paradigm involving Simulated Amnesia. J. Psychophysiology, 16, 1-11.

(131) (122) Rosenfeld, J.P., Rao, Soskins,M. & Miller, A. (2003) Scaled P300 Scalp Distribution Correlates of Verbal Deception in an Autobiographical Oddball Paradigm: Control for Task Demand. J. Psychophysiology. 17, 14-22.

(132) (123) Lehrer,P, Rosenfeld, J.P. et al. (2004) Biofeedback. In: Encyclopedia of Health and Behavioral Medicine, edited by N. Anderson. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, inc.

(133) (124) Rosenfeld, J.P. (2002) Scaled P300 Scalp Profiles in Detection of Deception. Technical Report to DOD for Project DoDPI98-P-0001, Jackson, S.C.: DoDPI Press.

134) (125) Rosenfeld, J.P. & Baehr, E. ( 2004) EEG Biofeedback

(“Neurofeedback”) for Affective Disorders. Consciousness,Emotional Self-regulation, and the Brain, edited by Mario Beauregard. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Co.

135) (126) Baehr, E., Rosenfeld, J.P. et al. (1998) Comparison of two EEG

Asymmetry indices in depressed patients vs. normal controls. Int. J. Psychophysiol., 31,89-93

(136) (127) Soskins, M., Rosenfeld, J.P., & Niendam, T. (2001).  The case for peak-to-peak measurement of P300 recorded at .3 hz high pass filter settings in detection of

deception.  Int. J. Psychophysiology, 40, 173-180

137) (128) Rosenfeld, J.Peter, Rao, Archana, Soskins, M., and Miller, A.R. (2002) P300 Scalp Distribution as an Index of Deception: Control for Task Demand. Journal of Credibility Assessment and Witness Psychology. 3 (1) 1-22. [Internet Journal]

138) (129)Rosenfeld, J.P. Soskins,M., Bosh, G., & Ryan, A. (2004) Simple effective countermeasures to P300-based tests of detection of concealed information. Psychophysiology, 41, 205-219

139) (130) Baehr, E., Rosenfeld, J.P., Miller, L., & Baehr, R.(2004) Premenstrual dysphoric disorder and changes in frontal alpha asymmetry. Internat. J. Psychophysiology.52, 159-167.

140) (131)Baehr., E., Miller, L. Rosenfeld, J.P., & Baehr, R. ( 2004) Changes in frontal brain asymmetry associated with premenstrual disorder: single case study. J. Neurotherapy 8, 29-42.

141) (132)Miller,A.R. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2004) Response-specific scalp distributions in deception detection and ERP correlates of psychopathic personality traits. J. Psychophysiology, 18, 13-26.

142) (133)Rosenfeld, J.P. “Brain Fingerprinting:” A Critical Analysis. (2005), Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice, 4, 20-37.

143) (134)Rosenfeld, J.P., Biroschak, J.R., Kleschen, M.J., & Smith, K.M.(2005), Subjective and objective probability effects on P300 revisited. Psychophysiology, 42, 356-359.

144) (135) Rosenfeld, J.P., Biroschak, J.R., & Furedy, J.J. (2006). P300-based detection of concealed autobiographical versus incidentally acquired information in target and non-target paradigms. Int. J. Psychophysiology, 60, 251-259.

145) (136) Rosenfeld, J.P. & Skogsberg, K.R. (2006), P300-based Stroop study with low probability and target Stroop oddballs: The evidence still favors the response selection hypothesis. Int. J. Psychophysiology, 60, 240-250.

146) (137) Rosenfeld, J.P., Shue, E., & Singer, E. (2007) Single versus multiple probe blocks of P300-based concealed information tests for autobiographical versus incidentally learned information. Biological Psychology, 74, 396-404

(147) (138) Rosenfeld, J.P. (2008). Detection of Deception: Event-Related Potentials. In B. L. Cutler (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Psychology and Law (Volume 1) (pp 197-198). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

 

(148 139) Lui, M. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2009). Thirty-Site P300 scalp distribution, amplitude variance across sites, and amplitude in detection of multiple deception issues. Social Neuroscience. 4, 491 -509.

 

(149) (140) Lui, M. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2008,). Detection of Deception about Multiple, Concealed, Mock Crime Items, based on a Spatial-Temporal Analysis of ERP Amplitude and Scalp Distribution, Psychophysiology,45,721-730.

(150) (141) Rosenfeld, J.P., Labkovsky, E., Winograd, M., Lui., A.M.,Vandenboom, C., & Chedid, E. (2008) The Complex Trial Protocol (CTP): A new, countermeasure-resistant, accurate P300-based method for detection of concealed information. Psychophysiology, 45, 906-919

(151) (142) Verschuere, B, Rosenfeld, J.P., Winograd, M., Labkovsky, E., & Wiersema, R. (2009) The role of deception in P300 memory detection. Legal and Criminological Psychology. 14, 253-262.

(152) (143) Lui, M. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2009). The Application of Subliminal Priming in Lie Detection: Scenario for Identification of Members of a Terrorist Ring. Psychophysiology. 46, 889–903

(153) (144) Ganis, G. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011). Neural Correlates of Deception in Oxford Handbook of Neuroethics J. Ed. by J. Illes and B.J. Sahakian. 101-118

(154 145) Meixner, J., Haynes, A., Winograd, M., & Rosenfeld (2009,). Assigned versus random, countermeasure-like responses in the P300 based Complex Trial Protocol for Detection of Deception: Task demand effects. Applied Psychophysiology. 34, 209-221.

(155 146) Rosenfeld, J.P. (2009) Foreword and Overview. Applied Psychophysiology. 34, 145-148.

(156 147) Rosenfeld, J.P., Tang, M., Meixner,, J., Winograd, M., Labkovsky, E. (2009).The effects of asymmetric vs. symmetric probability of targets following probe and irrelevant stimuli in the complex trial protocol for detection of concealed information with P300. Physiology & Behavior, 98, 10–16.

(157 148) Meixner, J. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2010). Countermeasure mechanisms in a P300-based concealed information test. Psychophysiology, 47, 57-65.

(158 149) Rosenfeld, J. P., & Labkovsky, E. (2010). New P300-based protocol to detect concealed information: Resistance to mental countermeasures against only half the irrelevant stimuli and a possible ERP indicator of countermeasures. Psychophysiology, 47, 1002-1010.

(159 150) Meixner, J. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011). A Mock Terrorism Application of the P300-Based Concealed Information Test, Psychophysiology. 48, 149-154

(160 151) Winograd, M. & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011). Mock Crime application of the Complex Trial Protocol (CTP) P300-based Concealed Information Test. (in press), Psychophysiology. 48, 155-161

(161 152) Rosenfeld (2011), P300 in Detecting Concealed Information. In B. Verschuere, G. Ben Shakhar, & E. Meijer, (Eds.) Memory Detection: Theory and application of the concealed information test . Cambridge University Press. 63-89.

(162 153) . Rosenfeld, J.P. & Greely. H.T. ( 2012). The P300 Event-Related Potential (ERP) in Detection of Deception: Review and Legal Issues. In Carl Edwards, (Ed.) Handbook of forensic Science, John Wiley and sons, West Sussex, U.K.

(163 154) Rosenfeld, J.P.. Ben Shakhar, G. & Ganis, G. (2012): Physiologically based methods of Concealed Memory Detection. In W. Sinnott-Armstrong, F. Schauer, & L. Nadel (Eds.), Memory and Law, Chapter 10, Oxford University Press.

(164 155) Ganis , G., Rosenfeld, J.P. , Meixner, J.B., Kievit, R.A., & Schendan, H.E. (2011) Lying in the scanner: Covert countermeasures disrupt deception detection by functional magnetic resonance imaging. NeuroImage. 55(1):312-9. Epub 2010 Nov 24.

( 165 156) Sokolovsky, A. Rothenberg,J., Labkovsky, E., Meixner,J.,& Rosenfeld, J.P. (2011) A novel countermeasure against the reaction time (RT) index of countermeasure (CM) use in the P300-based complex trial protocol (CTP) for detection of concealed information. International Journal of Psychophysiology.

(166, 157) Hu, X., Hegeman, D. Landry, E., & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2012). Increasing the number of irrelevant stimuli increases ability to detect countermeasures to the P300-based Complex Trial Protocol for concealed Information detection. Psychophysiology, 49, 85-95. (Online Aug., 2011).

(167, 158) Labkovsky, E. & Rosenfeld, J.P. ( 2012). The P300-Based, Complex Trial Protocol for Concealed Information Detection Resists Any Number of Sequential Countermeasures Against Up to Five Irrelevant Stimuli, Applied Psychophsiology. 37, 1-10. (Online October, 2011)

(168, 159) Hu, X., Rosenfeld, J. P., & Bodenhausen, G. V. (2012). Combating automatic autobiographical associations: the effect of instruction and training in strategically concealing information in the autobiographical implicit association test. Psychological Science, 23(10), 1079-1085. doi: 10.1177/0956797612443834

(169, 160) Rosenfeld, J.P., Hu, X., & Pedersen, K. Deception Awareness Improves P300-based Deception Detection in Concealed Information Tests, International Journal of Psychophysiology,(2012) 86, 114-121.

(170, 161) Meixner, J.B., Rosenfeld, J.P., Labkovsky, E., Winograd, M. et al. (2013). P900: A putative novel ERP Component that Indexes Countermeasure Use in the P300-Based Concealed Information, Applied Psychophysiology & Biofeedback, 38, 121-132

(171, 162) Hu, X., & Rosenfeld, J. P. (2012). Combining the P300-complex trial-based concealed information test and the reaction time-based autobiographical implicit association test in concealed memory detection. Psychophysiology, 49(8), 1090-1100. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.2012.01389.x

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(172, 165) Rosenfeld, J. P., Hu, X., Labkovsky, E., Meixner, J. & Winograd, M.R. (2013), Review of Recent Studies and Issues regarding the P300-based Complex Trial Protocol for Detection of Concealed Information. International Journal of Psychophysiology. 90, 118–134.

(173, 164) Dietrich, A.B., Hu, X., & Rosenfeld, J.P. (in press, March, 2014). The effects of sweep numbers per average and protocol type on the accuracy of the P300-based Concealed Information Test. Applied Psychophysiology & Biofeedback.

(174, 165) Meixner, J.B., Rosenfeld, J.P., Labkovsky, E., Winograd, M. et al. (2013). P900: A putative novel ERP Component that Indexes Countermeasure Use in the P300-Based Concealed Information, Applied Psychophysiology & Biofeedback, 38, 121-132

(175, 166) Hu, X., Pornpattananangkul, N., & Rosenfeld, J. P. (2012). N200 and P300 as orthogonal and integrable indicators of distinct awareness and recognition processes in memory detection. Psychophysiology, 50, 454-464

(176, 167) Winograd, M.R. and Rosenfeld, J.P. (2014). The Impact of Prior Knowledge from Participant Instructions in a Mock Crime P300 Concealed Information Test. Int. Journal of Psychophysiology, 94, 473-481.

(177, 168) Dietrich, A.B., Hu, X., & Rosenfeld, J.P. (2014). The effects of sweep numbers per average and protocol type on the accuracy of the P300-based Concealed Information Test. Applied Psychophysiology & Biofeedback. 39:67–73 DOI 10.1007/s10484-014-9244-y

(178, 169) Labkovsky, E. and Rosenfeld, J.P. (2014). A Novel Dual Probe Complex Trial Protocol for Detection of Concealed Information: Superiority of Pictorial vs. Verbal Presentation. Psychophysiology. 51, 1122-1130, DOI: 10.1111/psyp.12258

(179, 170) Meixner, J. and Rosenfeld, J.P. (2014). Detecting Knowledge of Incidentally Acquired, Real-World Memories Using a P300-Based Concealed Information Test. Psychological Science, 25, 1994-2005. DOI: 10.1177/0956797614547278

(180, 171) Hu, X., Bergstrom, Z., Bodenhausen, G., & Rosenfeld, J.P. (in press, 2015). Suppressing Unwanted Autobiographical Memories Reduces Their Automatic Influences: Evidence from Electrophysiology and an Implicit Autobiographical Memory Test. Psychological Science.

(181, 172) Rosenfeld, J.P. and Donchin, E. (2015, in press). Resampling (Bootstrapping) the mean: a definite do. Psychophysiology.

(182, 173) Rosenfeld, J.P., Ward, A., Frigo, V., Drapekin, J. & Labkovsky, E. (2015, in press). Evidence suggesting Superiority of Visual (Verbal) vs. Auditory Test Presentation Modality in the P300-based, Complex Trial Protocol for Concealed Autobiographical Memory Detection. Int. Journal of Psychophysiology

(183, 174) Rosenfeld, J.P., Ward, A., Thai, M. & Labkovsky, E. (2015 in press). Superiority of Pictorial vs. Verbal Presentation and Initial Exposure in the P300-based, Complex Trial Protocol for Concealed Memory Detection. Applied Psychophysiology & Biofeedback.

Current Research Interests

1. Brain mechanisms of deception: cognitive, emotional, physiological attributes of deception.

2. Brain mechanisms of memory, memory illusions, false memories.

3. Use of P3 event-related potentials in diagnosis and understanding of malingered cognitive deficit in head injury.

4. Psychophysiological correlates of emotion.

Radio and Television Appearances, Media Coverage:

1. 5 and 10 o'clock News, WMAQ-TV, Channel 5, Chicago, 1977.

2. 4:30 News, Channel 7, Chicago, 1981.

3. Reviewing Stand, August 2, 1981, WMAQ-AM Chicago, and Mutual Broadcasting Network later.

4. Katherine Catolin Show, Nov. 16, 1984, WGN-AM Chicago.

5. Pain and the Brain, by Mary Travis, Psychology Today, December, 1984: (story on research of J.P. Rosenfeld)

6. Lie Detection with Brain Waves. TV spots: CNN News, Today Show, August-November, 1988; Numerous other radio appearances, stories from AP News Release, 1988.

7. Major coverage in “Why We Lie”, BBC/.BBC, Discovery Channel. December 16, 2000.

Research Support:

1. NSF grant BNS75-17770: Operant neural control: A novel operant, $42,600; 1975-1978. P.I.

2. NIH grant GM23696-01: Morphine and nociceptive brain stimulation, $55,652; 1975-1978. P.I.

3. NIMH grant MH31966-01: Pilot Lesion: Study of Trigeminal Pain Models, $7,800; 1978- 1979. P.I.

4. NIH grant GM23696-03: Morphine and nociceptive etc., RENEWAL, $68,266; 1978-1980. P.I.

5. NIH grant DE05205: Operant neural control in trigeminal pain systems, $68,000; 1979-1981. P.I.

6. NIH grant GM23696-05-08: Morphine and nociceptive brain-stimulation, RENEWAL, $195,091; 1981-1985. P.I.

7. NIH grant E05204-03-06: Operant neural control in trigeminal pain systems, RENEWAL, $153,250; 1981-1985. P.I.

8. NIH grant T32NS07223: Sensory physiology training grant (participant).

9. NIH grant DE07905: Single neuronal activation by multiple opiate substrates, 1986-1989. $210,000.

10. NIDA grant DA06971: Single neuronal activation by multiple opiate substrates, 1990-1993, $349,142.

11. DOD/ONR grant DODPI98-P-0001: Scaled P300 Scalp Profiles in Detection of Deception,

1998-1999, $140,000

12. Extension of Item 11, $70,000 to August, 2001.

13. DoD/ONR grant: Detecting Efforts to defeat P300-based Deception tests, Department of Defense, submitted 10/30/2003, total direct costs: $101,702/year, funded from June 2006 to May 2009.

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