“…The P200 and P300 appear to reflect distinct CES processes, at pre-and post-perceptual stages, during the 3-back task performance. Whilst less is known about the functional significance of the P200 compared to an extensive literature on P300, it has been proposed as reflecting processes underpinning perceptual matching and stimulus classification, such as stimulus detection, evaluation, storage, and encoding ( Crowley & Colrain, 2004;Gholami Doborjeh, Kasabov, Gholami Doborjeh, & Sumich, 2018;Potts, 2004) that facilitate the post-perceptual processing as reflected by the P300 wave ( Chen et al , 2008) . Other studies have implicated P200 mechanisms in stimulus switching ( Karayanidis & Michie, 1997;Nicholson, Karayanidis, Bumak, Poboka, & Michie, 2006;Stefanics, Kremláček, & Czigler, 2014) .…”