StruveF.A., The necessity and value of securing routine electroencephalograms in psychiatric patients: A preliminary report on the issue of referrals, Clin. Electroenceph., 7:115–30, 1976.
2.
StruveF.A., Utilization of clinical electroencephalographic assessment in the psychiatric hospital: Considerations concerning the issue of routine screening versus selective physician referral, J. Psychiat. Treat Eval., 2:55–62, 1980.
3.
TuckerG.J.DetreT.HarrowM., and GlaserG.H., Behavior and symptoms of psychiatric patients and the electroencephalogram, Arch. Gen. Psychiat., 12:278–86, 1965.
4.
SmallJ.G., The six per second spike and wave—a psychiatric population study, Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., 24:561–68, 1968.
5.
DaviesR.K.NeilJ.F., and HimmelhochJ.M., Cerebral dysrhythmias in schizophrenics receiving phenothiazines: Clinical correlates, Clin. Electroenceph., 6:103–15, 1975.
6.
GibbsF.A., and NovickR.G., Electroencephalographic findings among adult patients in a private psychiatric hospital, Clin. Electroenceph., 8:79–88, 1977.
7.
StruveF.A., and PikeL.E., Routine admission electroencephalograms of adolescent and adult psychiatric patients awake and asleep, Clin. Electroenceph., 5:67–72, 1974.
8.
MavorH., and HellenM., Nasopharyngeal electrode recording, Amer. J. EEG Technol., 4:43, 1964.
9.
DejesusP.V., and MaslandW.S., The role of nasopharyngeal electrodes in clinical electroencephalography, Neurology, 20:869–78, 1970.
10.
StruveF.A.BeckaD.R.GreenM.A., and HowardA., Reliability of clinical interpretation of the electroencephalogram. Clin. Electroenceph., 6:54–60, 1975.
11.
StruveF.A.PikeL.E., and RossD.C., Consistency of EEG abnormality over time: A test-retest reliability approach with psychiatric patients, Clin Electroenceph., 10:96–104, 1979.
12.
GibbsF.A., and GibbsE.L., Atlas of Electroencephalography, Vol. 3: Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders, Addison-Wesley Press, Reading, Mass., 1964.