AC amplifiers can introduce significant distortions into the
low frequency and DC components of recorded electrophysiological
data such as event-related potentials (ERPs). Methods for
correcting such distortions (i.e., estimating the waveform of
the original data) after the data have been amplified
and recorded rely on an accurate estimate of the amplifier's
time constant (TC). We show that the filter characteristics
of AC amplifiers in at least some commercially available ERP
recording instruments may vary considerably across individual
channels, even when each houses an identical AC amplifier circuit.
Clearly, distortion correction methods must take this variability
into account. We propose an empirical means of estimating the
correct TC value. This approach yields more accurate correction
than those based on TCs calculated analytically.