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More Than Smell-COVID-19 Is Associated With Severe Impairment of Smell, Taste, and Chemesthesis.
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In: Chemical senses, vol 45, iss 7 (2020)
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More than smell – COVID-19 is associated with severe impairment of smell, taste, and chemesthesis
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In: Chem Senses (2020)
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When having two names facilitates lexical selection: Similar results in the picture-word task from translation distractors in bilinguals and synonym distractors in monolinguals
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On Topic/focus Agreement and Movement
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In: Yang, Barry C.-Y.(2013). On Topic/focus Agreement and Movement. Proceedings of the 37th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, 37(37), 399 - 413. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/50f0j7q7 (2013)
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Brain potentials during language production in children and adults: An ERP study of the English past tense
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Abstract:
The current study examines the neural correlates of 8-to-12-year-old children and adults producing inflected word forms, specifically regular vs. irregular past-tense forms in English, using a silent production paradigm. ERPs were time-locked to a visual cue for silent production of either a regular or irregular past-tense form or a 3rd person singular present tense form of a given verb (e.g., walked/sang vs. walks/sings). Subsequently, another visual stimulus cued participants for an overt vocalization of their response. ERP results for the adult group revealed a negativity 300?450 ms after the silent-production cue for regular compared to irregular past-tense forms. There was no difference in the present form condition. Children?s brain potentials revealed developmental changes, with the older children demonstrating more adult-like ERP responses than the younger ones. We interpret the observed ERP responses as reflecting combinatorial processing involved in regular (but not irregular) past-tense formation.
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Keyword:
BF Psychology; P Philology. Linguistics
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URL: http://repository.essex.ac.uk/7200/ https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bandl.2012.12.010
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On topic/focus agreement and movement
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In: Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society; BLS 37: General Session and Parasession on Language, Gender, and Sexuality; 399-416 ; 2377-1666 ; 0363-2946 (2011)
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What we mean, what we think we mean, and how language surprises us
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British-English norms and naming times for a set of 539 pictures: the role of age of acquisition.
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In: Symplectic Elements at Oxford ; Europe PubMed Central ; PubMed (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/) ; Web of Science (Lite) (http://apps.webofknowledge.com/summary.do) ; Scopus (http://www.scopus.com/home.url) ; CrossRef (2010)
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What remains of our knowledge of language? reply to Collins
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Age of acquistion, frequency trajectory and cumulative frequency in lexical processing tasks.
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In: IXX British Psychology Society Cognitive Section. ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00115061 ; IXX British Psychology Society Cognitive Section., 2004, Leeds, United Kingdom (2004)
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