Psychology Faculty Profiles

J. Peter Rosenfeld, Ph.D.
Professor
Brain, Behavior, and Cognition; Clinical Psychology


Office: Cresap 206
Phone: (847) 491-3629
E-mail: jp-rosenfeld@northwestern.edu

Links

Curriculum Vitae

Rosenfeld Lab Homepage

Research Interests

Research Interests... Mechanisms, classification, and detection of deception; physiological indices of cognition and emotion (and voluntary control of same).

 

Selected Publications

PDF downloadable papers can be found on Rosenfeld Lab Homepage (see link above).

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.

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.

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.

Rosenfeld, J.P. “Brain Fingerprinting:” A Critical Analysis. (2005) in press, Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice.

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.

Rosenfeld, J.P., Biroschak, J.R., & Furedy, J.J. (2005) in press, P300-based detection of concealed autobiographical versus incidentally acquired information in target and non-target paradigms. Int. J. Psychophysiology. 2005

Rosenfeld, J.P. & Skogsberg, K.R. (2005), in press, P300-based Stroop study with low probability and target Stroop oddballs: The evidence still favors the response selection hypothesis. Int. J. Psychophysiology.

Rosenfeld, J.P. (2000). An EEG biofeedback protocol for affective disorders, Clinical Electroencephalography, 31, 7-12.