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Lehtonen, Minna; Vorobyev, Victor A.; Hugdahl, Kenneth; Tuokkola, Terhi; Laine, Matti – Brain and Language, 2006
By employing visual lexical decision and functional MRI, we studied the neural correlates of morphological decomposition in a highly inflected language (Finnish) where most inflected noun forms elicit a consistent processing cost during word recognition. This behavioral effect could reflect suffix stripping at the visual word form level and/or…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Finno Ugric Languages, Word Recognition, Neurolinguistics
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Kittredge, Audrey; Davis, Lissa; Blumstein, Sheila E. – Brain and Language, 2006
In a series of experiments, the effect of white noise distortion and talker variation on lexical access in normal and Broca's aphasic participants was examined using an auditory lexical decision paradigm. Masking the prime stimulus in white noise resulted in reduced semantic priming for both groups, indicating that lexical access is degraded by…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Acoustics, Auditory Stimuli, Patients
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Ziegler, Johannes C. – Brain and Language, 2006
It has been commonly agreed that developmental dyslexia in different languages has a common biological origin: a dysfunction of left posterior temporal brain regions dealing with phonological processes. Siok, Perfetti, Jin, and Tan (2004, "Nature," 431, 71-76) challenge this biological unity theory of dyslexia: Chinese dyslexics show no deficits…
Descriptors: Brain, Phonology, Dyslexia, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Kho, Kuan H.; Duffau, Hugues; Gatignol, Peggy; Leijten, Frans S. S.; Ramsey, Nick F.; van Rijen, Peter C.; Rutten, Geert-Jan M. – Brain and Language, 2007
We present two bilingual patients without language disorders in whom involuntary language switching was induced. The first patient switched from Dutch to English during a left-sided amobarbital (Wada) test. Functional magnetic resonance imaging yielded a predominantly left-sided language distribution similar for both languages. The second patient…
Descriptors: Patients, Stimulation, Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language)
Pickering, M.J.; McElree, B.; Traxler, M.J. – Brain and Language, 2005
The sentence The secretary began the memo requires specifying what event the secretary began, because the memo does not refer to an event. McElree, Traxler, Pickering, Seely, and Jackendoff (2001) and Traxler, Pickering, and McElree (2002) found evidence from both self-paced reading and eye-tracking that such sentences caused processing…
Descriptors: Office Occupations, Sentences, Language Processing
Pammer, K.; Lavis, R.; Cooper, C.; Hansen, P.C.; Cornelissen, P.L. – Brain and Language, 2005
Descriptors: Language Processing, Chinese, Adult Education
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Moses, Melanie S.; Nickels, Lyndsey A.; Sheard, Christine – Brain and Language, 2004
In this study, the recurrent perseverative errors produced by 44 speakers without impairment were examined in picture naming and reading aloud tasks under a fast response deadline. The proportion of perseverative relative to non-perseverative errors was greater in picture naming, the more error-prone task, than in reading aloud. Additionally,…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Language Processing, Error Patterns
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Boudelaa, Sami; Marslen-Wilson, William D. – Brain and Language, 2004
This study probes the effects of allomorphy on access to Arabic roots and word patterns in two cross-modal priming experiments. Experiment 1 used strong roots which undergo no allomorphy, and weak roots which undergo allomorphy and surface with only two of their three consonants in some derivations. Word pairs sharing a root morpheme prime each…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Language Processing, Morphemes
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Yeh, Su-Ling; Li, Jing-Ling – Brain and Language, 2004
Repetition blindness (RB) refers to the failure to detect the second occurrence of a repeated item in rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP). In two experiments using RSVP, the ability to report two critical characters was found to be impaired when these two characters were identical (Experiment 1) or similar by sharing one repeated component…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Chinese, Recognition (Psychology)
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Hinojosa, Jose A.; Martin-Loeches, Manuel; Munoz, Francisco; Casado, Pilar; Pozo, Miguel A. – Brain and Language, 2004
This study investigates the automatic-controlled nature of early semantic processing by means of the Recognition Potential (RP), an event-related potential response that reflects lexical selection processes. For this purpose tasks differing in their processing requirements were used. Half of the participants performed a physical task involving a…
Descriptors: Semantics, Language Processing, Reaction Time
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Pell, Marc D. – Brain and Language, 2007
Although there is a strong link between the right hemisphere and understanding emotional prosody in speech, there are few data on how the right hemisphere is implicated for understanding the emotive "attitudes" of a speaker from prosody. This report describes two experiments which compared how listeners with and without focal right hemisphere…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Suprasegmentals, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Language Processing
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Cooke, Ayanna; Grossman, Murray; DeVita, Christian; Gonzalez-Atavales, Julio; Moore, Peachie; Chen, Willis; Gee, James; Detre, John – Brain and Language, 2006
Our model of sentence comprehension includes at least grammatical processes important for structure-building, and executive resources such as working memory that support these grammatical processes. We hypothesized that a core network of brain regions supports grammatical processes, and that additional brain regions are activated depending on the…
Descriptors: Memory, Grammar, Sentences, Brain
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Chapman, Sandra B.; Gamino, Jacquelyn F.; Cook, Lori G.; Hanten, Gerri; Li, Xiaoqi; Levin, Harvey S. – Brain and Language, 2006
Emerging evidence suggests that a traumatic brain injury (TBI) in childhood may disrupt the ability to abstract the central meaning or gist-based memory from connected language (discourse). The current study adopts a novel approach to elucidate the role of immediate and working memory processes in producing a cohesive and coherent gist-based text…
Descriptors: Memory, Children, Brain, Language Processing
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Zwitserlood, Pienie – Brain and Language, 2004
Three experiments investigated the impact of syllabic boundary information and of morphological structure on performance in a sequence-monitoring task. In sequence monitoring, participants detect pre-specified sequences of phonemes in spoken carrier words. Sequences corresponded to the first syllable of the carrier word, to its first morpheme, or…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Morphemes, Cues, Syllables
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Kaan, Edith; Wijnen, Frank; Swaab, Tamara Y. – Brain and Language, 2004
In the present study we use event related potentials (ERPs) to explore the time course of identification and resolution of verb gaps. ERPs were recorded while participants read sentences that contained a verb gap like "Ron took/sanded the planks, and Bill O the hammer"... Plausibility of the critical words ("hammer") that followed the verb gap was…
Descriptors: Verbs, Comprehension, Language Processing, Sentence Structure
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