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The Role of Age of Acquisition on Past Tense Generation in Spanish-English Bilinguals: An fMRI Study
Waldron, Eric J.; Hernandez, Arturo E. – Brain and Language, 2013
At its most basic sense, the sensorimotor/emergentist (S/E) model suggests that early second language (L2) learning is preferentially reliant upon sensory and motor processes, while later L2 learning is accomplished by greater reliance on executive abilities. To investigate the S/E model using fMRI, neural correlates of L2 age of acquisition were…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Spanish, English, Morphemes
Lewis, Gwyneth; Solomyak, Olla; Marantz, Alec – Brain and Language, 2011
Recent neurolinguistic studies present somewhat conflicting evidence concerning the role of the inferior temporal cortex (IT) in visual word recognition within the first 200 ms after presentation. On the one hand, fMRI studies of the Visual Word Form Area (VWFA) suggest that the IT might recover representations of the orthographic form of words.…
Descriptors: Priming, Evidence, Morphemes, Word Recognition
Pulvermuller, Friedemann – Brain and Language, 2010
Neuroscience has greatly improved our understanding of the brain basis of abstract lexical and semantic processes. The neuronal devices underlying words and concepts are distributed neuronal assemblies reaching into sensory and motor systems of the cortex and, at the cognitive level, information binding in such widely dispersed circuits is…
Descriptors: Semantics, Syntax, Morphemes, Linguistics
Havas, Viktoria; Rodriguez-Fornells, Antoni; Clahsen, Harald – Brain and Language, 2012
This study investigates brain potentials to derived word forms in Spanish. Two experiments were performed on derived nominals that differ in terms of their productivity and semantic properties but are otherwise similar, an acceptability judgment task and a reading experiment using event-related brain potentials (ERPs) in which correctly and…
Descriptors: Semantics, Morphemes, Spanish, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Cappelle, Bert; Shtyrov, Yury; Pulvermuller, Friedemann – Brain and Language, 2010
There is a considerable linguistic debate on whether phrasal verbs (e.g., "turn up," "break down") are processed as two separate words connected by a syntactic rule or whether they form a single lexical unit. Moreover, views differ on whether meaning (transparency vs. opacity) plays a role in determining their syntactically-connected or lexical…
Descriptors: Phrase Structure, Verbs, Morphemes, Neurology
Kaup, Barbara; Ludtke, Jana; Maienborn, Claudia – Brain and Language, 2010
In two experiments using the action-sentence-compatibility paradigm we investigated the simulation processes that readers undertake when processing state descriptions with adjectives (e.g., "Die Schublade ist offen/zu". ["The drawer is open/shut"]) or adjectival passives (e.g., "Die Schublade ist…
Descriptors: Sentences, Simulation, Cognitive Processes, Language Processing
Faroqi-Shah, Yasmeen; Dickey, Michael Walsh – Brain and Language, 2009
Agrammatic aphasic individuals exhibit marked production deficits for tense morphology. This paper presents three experiments examining whether a group of English-speaking agrammatic individuals (n = 10) exhibit parallel deficits in their comprehension of tense. Results from two comprehension experiments (on-line grammaticality judgment studies)…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphemes, Aphasia, Morphology (Languages)
Kok, Peter; van Doorn, Arna; Kolk, Herman – Brain and Language, 2007
In this study we investigate the production of verb inflection in agrammatic aphasia. In a number of recent studies it has been argued that tense inflection is harder to produce for agrammatic individuals than agreement inflection. However, results are still inconclusive, at least for Dutch and German. Here, we report three experiments in which…
Descriptors: Word Order, Language Processing, Verbs, Morphemes
Linares, Rafael Enrique; Rodriguez-Fornells, Antoni; Clahsen, Harald – Brain and Language, 2006
This study presents results from a nonce-word elicited production task and a reading experiment using event-related brain potentials (ERPs) investigating finite forms of Spanish verbs which consist of marked stems and regular person and number agreement suffixes. The first experiment showed that unmarked stems are productively extended to nonce…
Descriptors: Spanish, Verbs, Morphemes, Suffixes
Taft, Marcus; Kougious, Paul – Brain and Language, 2004
The word virus is not normally considered polymorphemic, yet it is clearly both semantically and orthographically related to the word viral. Thus, the subunit vir takes on the role of a bound morpheme. In contrast, the words future and futile also share a subunit (fut), but are semantically unrelated. The reported experiment demonstrates…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Semantics, Language Processing
Ullman, M.T.; Pancheva, R.; Love, T.; Yee, E.; Swinney, D.; Hickok, G. – Brain and Language, 2005
Are the linguistic forms that are memorized in the mental lexicon and those that are specified by the rules of grammar subserved by distinct neurocognitive systems or by a single computational system with relatively broad anatomic distribution? On a dual-system view, the productive -ed-suffixation of English regular past tense forms (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Memory, Dictionaries, Aphasia
Braber, N.; Patterson, K.; Ellis, K.; Lambon Ralph, M.A. – Brain and Language, 2005
A previous study of 10 patients with Broca's aphasia demonstrated that the advantage for producing the past tense of irregular over regular verbs exhibited by these patients was eliminated when the two sets of past-tense forms were matched for phonological complexity (Bird, Lambon Ralph, Seidenberg, McClelland, & Patterson, 2003). The…
Descriptors: Patients, Morphemes, Sentences, Aphasia
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
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
Penke, Martina; Janssen, Ulrike; Eisenbeiss, Sonja – Brain and Language, 2004
This paper investigates the paradigmatic relations between inflected word forms (or their affixes) and the feature specifications of these elements. In two sentence-matching experiments German speakers had to decide whether sentence pairs involving inflected adjectives or determiners were identical or not. In both experiments, there was a delay…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Morphemes, Syntax, Sentences
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