We investigated the electrophysiological correlates of the processing of subject's own name (SON) in comparison to familiar and unfamiliar names in the Chinese language. The three types of names were the deviants in an oddball paradigm among lexical and non-lexical phrases. All items consisted of three characters, and the non-lexical items were the targets. All names caused a clear N170 component of identical size which we take as a correlate of structural encoding. Only SON elicited a large N250 component, reflecting attentional capturing of SON. Additionally, SON caused a larger but later peaking P300 than the other two name stimuli which we interpret as a correlate of access to self-reference information.
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