“…Both, the N2pc as well as the sustained posterior contralateral negative ERP (SPCN), two negative deflections of the ERP at approximately 200 ms and 300-600 ms following stimulus onset, respectively, were smaller in low than in high performers. The N2pc at 200-ms peaks at posterior sites (PO7 and PO8) contralateral to the attended hemispace; its amplitude has been observed to be greater when people detect a change versus when a change is missed (Eimer & Mazza, 2005;Tseng et al, 2012) and has been closely related to the deployment of visual attention (Eimer, 1996;Jolicoeur, Brisson, & Robitaille, 2008;Luck & Hillyard, 1994;Woodman, 2010;Woodman, Arita, & Luck, 2009). The SPCN, following the N2pc at 300-600 ms (Jolicoeur et al, 2008), rather relates to the maintenance and access of visual short-term memory, as its amplitude varies according to memory load, persisting over the entire retention interval (Eimer & Kiss, 2010;Jolicoeur et al, 2008).…”