1. an old but classic -- Donchin, E., Ritter, W., & McCallum, C. (1978). Cognitive psychophysiology: The endogenous components of the ERP. In E. Callaway, P. Tueting, & S. Koslow (Eds.), Brain event-related potentials in man (pp. 349-441). New York: Academic Press.; 2. an expensive but useful BOOK on ALL THINGS ERPs - The Oxford Handbook of Event-Related Potentials
A good introduction: Geoffrey F. Woodman (2010), “A brief introduction to the use of event-related potentials in studies of perception and attention” publicado en la revista Attention, Perception and Psychophysics.
You might checkout the article: Key, A. P. F., Dove, G. O., & Maguire, M. J. (2005). "Linking Brainwaves to the Brain: An ERP Primer." Developmental Neuropsychology 27(2): 183-215.
Hi, beside the text already suggested, good sources are also:
Rugg, MD, & Coles MG, (Ed. 1995): Electrophysiology of Mind: Event-related brain potentials and cognition, Oxford, Oxford University press.
Boris Kotchoubey, Event-related potentials, cognition, and behavior: A biological approach, Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 30 (2006) 42–65.
Teija Kujala, Risto Naatanen: The adaptive brain: A neurophysiological perspective, Progress in Neurobiology 91 (2010) 55–67
Texts related to specific ERP features/components are:
Wolfgang Klimesch, Simon Hanslmayr, Paul Sauseng, Walter R. Gruber and Michael Doppelmayr: P1 and Traveling Alpha Waves: Evidence for Evoked Oscillations J Neurophysiol 97:1311-1318, 2007.
J. Bruno Debruille: The N400 potential could index a semantic inhibition, Brain Research reviews, 56 (2007) 472–477
Gina R. Kuperberg, Donna A. Kreher , Tali Ditman, What can Event-related Potentials tell us about language, and perhaps even thought, in schizophrenia? International Journal of Psychophysiology 75 (2010) 66–76
Connie C. Duncan, et al., Event-related potentials in clinical research: Guidelines for eliciting, recording, and quantifying mismatch negativity, P300, and N400; Clinical Neurophysiology 120 (2009) 1883–1908