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Hits 41 – 60 of 99

41
The Dynamic Role of Subphonemic Cues in Speech Perception: Investigating Coarticulatory Processing Across Sound Classes
Arbour, Jessica. - 2012
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42
Stimulus onset asynchrony and the timeline of word recognition : event-related potentials during sentence reading
In: Neuropsychologia ; 50 (2012), 8. - S. 1852-1870. - ISSN 0028-3932. - eISSN 1873-3514 (2012)
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43
A real time Named Entity Recognition system for Arabic text mining
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44
Phonological Priming in Japanese-English Bilinguals: Evidence from Lexical Decision and ERP
In: Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository (2012)
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45
Who is crossing where? Infants' discrimination of figures and grounds in events
In: Cognition. - Amsterdam [u.a] : Elsevier 121 (2011) 2, 176-195
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46
Receptive Vocabulary Knowledge in Low-Functioning Autism as Assessed by Eye Movements, Pupillary Dilation, and Event-Related Potentials
In: DTIC (2011)
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47
Automatic Top-Down Processing Explains Common Left Occipito-Temporal Responses to Visual Words and Objects
In: CEREB CORTEX , 21 (1) 103 - 114. (2011) (2011)
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48
Attentional Cues During Speech Perception
In: Open Access Dissertations (2011)
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49
Influence of aging on the neural correlates of autobiographical, episodic, and semantic memory retrieval
St-Laurent, Marie; Abdi, Herve; Burianova, Hana. - : M I T Press, 2011
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50
Prestimulus subsequent memory effects for auditory and visual events
In: Journal of cognitive neuroscience. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press Journals 22 (2010) 6, 1212-1223
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OLC Linguistik
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51
Inferior Frontal Gyrus Activation Predicts Individual Differences in Perceptual Learning of Cochlear-Implant Simulations
In: J NEUROSCI , 30 (21) 7179 - 7186. (2010) (2010)
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52
Lexicality drives audio-motor transformations in Broca's area
In: BRAIN LANG , 112 (1) 3 - 11. (2010) (2010)
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53
On Parsing Visual Sequences with the Hidden Markov Model
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54
Early emotion word processing: evidence from event-related potentials
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55
Language experience shapes early electrophysiological responses to visual stimuli: the effects of writing system, stimulus length, and presentation duration.
In: NeuroImage, vol 39, iss 4 (2008)
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56
Improving Information Extraction and Translation Using Component Interactions
In: DTIC (2008)
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57
Neural correlates of foveal splitting in reading: Evidence from an ERP study of Chinese character recognition
In: Hsiao, Janet Hui-wen; Shillcock, Richard; & Lee, Chia-ying. (2007). Neural correlates of foveal splitting in reading: Evidence from an ERP study of Chinese character recognition. Neuropsychologia, 45(6), 1280 - 1292. UC San Diego: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5b67s9nb (2007)
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58
Entropy Based Classifier Combination for Sentence Segmentation
In: DTIC (2007)
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59
Rhyme processing in the brain: An ERP mapping study
In: INT J PSYCHOPHYSIOL , 63 (3) 240 - 250. (2007) (2007)
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60
Distinct patterns of neural activity during memory formation of nonwords versus words
In: J COGNITIVE NEUROSCI , 19 (11) 1776 - 1789. (2007) (2007)
Abstract: Research into the neural underpinnings of memory formation has focused on the encoding of familiar verbal information. Here, we address how the brain supports the encoding of novel information that does not have meaning. Electrical brain activity was recorded from the scalps of healthy young adults while they performed an incidental encoding task (syllable judgments) on separate series of words and "nonwords" (nonsense letter strings that are orthographically legal and pronounceable). Memory for the items was then probed with a recognition memory test. For words as well as nonwords, event-related potentials differed depending on whether an item would subsequently be remembered or forgotten. However, the polarity and timing of the effect varied across item type. For words, subsequently remembered items showed the Usually observed positive-going, frontally distributed modulation from around 600 msec after word onset. For nonwords, by contrast, a negative-going, spatially widespread modulation predicted encoding success from 1000 rnsec onward. Nonwords also showed a modulation shortly after item onset. These findings imply that the brain supports the encoding of familiar and unfamiliar letter strings in qualitatively different ways, including the engagement of distinct neural activity at different points in time. The processing of semantic attributes plays an important role in the encoding of words and the associated positive frontal modulation.
Keyword: BRAIN ACTIVITY; EPISODIC MEMORY; EVENT-RELATED FMRI; FRONTAL-CORTEX; MEDIAL TEMPORAL-LOBE; POTENTIALS; PREFRONTAL CORTEX; RECOGNITION MEMORY; RETRIEVAL; SUBSEQUENT MEMORY
URL: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/3350/
http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/3350/1/3350.pdf
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