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Modulation of BOLD response in motion sensitive lateral temporal cortex by real and fictive motion sentences
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In: http://crl.ucsd.edu/newsletter/Publications/Saygin_McCulluogh_Emmorey_JCN_2010.pdf (2010)
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What is involved and what is necessary for complex linguistic and nonlinguistic auditory processing: Evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging and lesion data
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In: http://eprints.ucl.ac.uk/3670/1/3670.pdf (2007)
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Grammaticality Judgment under Non-Optimal Processing Conditions: Deficits induced in normal participants resemble those observed in aphasic patients
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In: http://crl.ucsd.edu/~saygin/papers/tjudgedegabs.pdf (2003)
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Voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping.
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In: https://crl.ucsd.edu/%7Esaygin/papers/vlsm_nn03.pdf (2003)
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Pragmatics in Human-Computer Conversations
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In: http://crl.ucsd.edu/~saygin/papers/saygin-jop.pdf (2002)
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Processing figurative language in a multi-lingual task: Translation, transfer and metaphor
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In: http://crl.ucsd.edu/~saygin/papers/corplingpaper.pdf (2001)
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Turing Test: 50 years later
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In: http://www.cs.bilkent.edu.tr/~ilyas/PDF/minds2000.pdf (1999)
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Neural Resources for Processing Language and Environmental Sounds: Evidence from aphasia
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In: http://crl.ucsd.edu/~saygin/papers/Saygin03Brain.pdf
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RUNNING TITLE: LANGUAGE AND THE BRAIN Language and the Brain
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In: http://www.alphalab.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/Publications/LizFestscriftChaptLangBrain.pdf
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Abstract:
Language and the Brain 2 For centuries, opinions regarding the fundamental character of neural organization have swung between two often caricatured poles: a phrenological view (Fodor, 1983; Gall, 1810), where each sensorimotor and cognitive function is subserved by a single region of neural tissue, and an equipotential view (Goldstein, 1948; Lashley, 1950), where the functions of particular brain regions are not sharply defined, and contribute to multiple mental processes. Over the last 40 years, the field of language research has been particularly polarized by an analogous debate regarding mental organization, with both generative linguistics and psycholinguistics often taking a an explicitly modular and often phrenological position (Grodzinsky, 2000; Mauner, Fromkin, & Cornell, 1993), in which mental processes are subserved in specific “loci ” of information processing systems and/or specific brain regions. By contrast, some psycholinguistic and neuropsychological research has moved away from this extreme position, but without resorting to a theory of equipotentiality. This alternative is consistent both with neurobiological notions of regional specialization as well as observed overlap in the
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URL: http://www.alphalab.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/Publications/LizFestscriftChaptLangBrain.pdf http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.485.6709
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FORUM LANGUAGE IN AN EMBODIED BRAIN: THE ROLE OF ANIMAL MODELS
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In: http://crl.ucsd.edu/~saygin/papers/cortexforum04.pdf
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