“…The relationship between PFC and spatiotemporal source memory was corroborated in healthy young adults via event-related potentials (ERPs) in list-discrimination and spatial source tests (Trott, Friedman, & Ritter, 1997;Van Petten, Senkfor, & Newberg, 2000). On the other hand, a number of ERP studies have also demonstrated engagement of PFC during source tests that tap conjunctions of perceptual attributes that might be considered "intra-item", such as wordvoice and object-color pairings (Friedman, Cycowicz, & Bersick, 2005;Senkfor & Van Petten, 1998;Kuo & Van Petten, 2006;Wilding, Doyle, & Rugg, 1995 Segal, & Hart, 2003;Suzuki et al, 2002), perceptual judgments (Fan, Snodgrass, & Bilder, 2003;Ranganath, Heller, & Wilding, 2007;Ranganath, Johnson, & D'Esposito, 2000;Raye, Johnson, Mitchell, & Nolde, 2000), and judgments about the encoding task that accompanied a stimulus (Dobbins, Foley, Schacter, & Wagner, 2002;Dobbins & Han, 2006;Dobbins, Rice, Wagner, & Schacter, 2003). However, these observations of prefrontal activity across intraitem and extra-item source tests have little to say about the possibility that some varieties of source information place greater retrieval demands on PFC than others.…”