The surface Laplacian of the human-brain event-related potential were applied to an experiment designed to compare the known cognitive sites for mental tasks with the peak positions of the surface Laplacians of the subject's cortical electric potentials at each instant during a task. The computer was programmed to present randomly a letter 'L' or 'R' On a computer screen. When the monitor commands the subject to press the keyboard with subject's left (right) index finger depending on 'L' ('R'), the subject presses the left (right) shift-key on the keyboard. Multichannel event-related potentials were used to estimate the distributions of the surface Laplacians of cortically generated electric potentials on the scalp. The locus of the surface Laplacian peak corresponds to the sites and the stages of cortical source localization of the neural activity in both the visual and the motor area. The locus of the surface Laplacian peak seems to track the sequence of known cortical localization of cognitive process.