 The study aimed to compare auditory event-related potentials, ERPs, measured using a commercial gaming electroencephalography, EEG, system with those measured by a widely used, laboratory-based research EEG system. The researchers simultaneously recorded EEGs from both systems while presenting 21 adults with standard and deviant tones under passive and active listening conditions. The results showed that the morphology of the late auditory ERP waveforms was similar across all participants, but the MMM waveforms were only similar for participants with non-noisy MMM waveforms. Peak amplitude and latency measures revealed no significant differences between the two systems. Overall, the findings suggest that the gaming EEG system may be a valid alternative to laboratory ERP systems for recording reliable late auditory ERPs over the frontal cortices. This article was authored by Nicholas A. Badcock, Petrula Musico, Yatan Mahajan, and others. We are article.tv, links in the description below.