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1
Sentence repetition as a clinical marker for Mandarin DLD (Wang et al., 2022) ...
Wang, Danyang; Zheng, Li; Lin, Yuanyuan. - : ASHA journals, 2022
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2
Sentence repetition as a clinical marker for Mandarin DLD (Wang et al., 2022) ...
Wang, Danyang; Zheng, Li; Lin, Yuanyuan. - : ASHA journals, 2022
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3
Distinct and common neural coding of semantic and non-semantic control demands
In: Neuroimage (2021)
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4
Assessment of a biofluid mechanics-based model for calculating portal pressure in canines
In: BMC Vet Res (2020)
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5
Cross cultural differences in implicit learning of chunks versus symmetries
Ling, Xiaoli; Zheng, Li; Guo, Xiuyan. - : Royal Society, 2018
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6
Tonal symmetry induces fluency and sense of well-formedness
Abstract: Fluency influences grammaticality judgments of visually presented strings in artificial grammar learning (AGL). Of many potential sources that engender fluency, symmetry is considered to be an important factor. However, symmetry may function differently for visual and auditory stimuli, which present computationally different problems. Thus, the current study aimed to examine whether objectively manipulating fluency by speeding up perception (i.e. manipulating the inter-stimulus interval, ISI, between each syllable of a string) influenced judgments of tonal strings; and thus how symmetry-based fluency might influence judgments. In experiment 1, with only a test phase, participants were required to give their preference ratings of tonal strings as a measurement of fluency. In experiment 2, participants were instructed to make grammaticality judgments after being incidentally trained on tonal symmetry. Results of experiment 1 showed that tonal strings with shorter ISI were liked more than those with longer ISI while such difference was not found between symmetric and asymmetric strings without training. Additionally, experiment 2 found both main effects of symmetry and ISI as well as an interaction. In particular, only asymmetric strings were more likely to be judged as grammatical when they were presented at a shorter ISI. Taken together, participants were sensitive to the fluency induced by the manipulation of ISI and sensitive to symmetry only after training. In sum, we conclude that objective speed influenced grammaticality judgments, implicit learning of tonal symmetry resulted in enhanced fluency, and that fluency may serve as a basis for grammaticality judgments.
URL: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00165
http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/73603/4/fpsyg-09-00165.pdf
http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/73603/
http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/73603/1/__smbhome.uscs.susx.ac.uk_ellenaj_Desktop_SRO_after%20august_Qiao%20et%20al%202018%20Tonal%20symmetry%20induces%20fluency%20and%20sense%20of%20well-formedness.pdf
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7
Altered amygdala and hippocampus effective connectivity in mild cognitive impairment patients with depression: a resting-state functional MR imaging study with granger causality analysis
Zheng, Li Juan; Yang, Gui Fen; Zhang, Xin Yuan. - : Impact Journals LLC, 2017
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8
The neural basis of implicit learning of task-irrelevant Chinese tonal sequence
Ling, Xiaoli; Guo, Xiuyan; Zheng, Li. - : Springer Velag, 2015
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9
Exposure to violence reduces empathetic responses to other’s pain
In: Brain and cognition. - San Diego, Calif. [u.a.] : Elsevier Science 82 (2013) 2, 187-191
OLC Linguistik
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10
Using silver and semi-gold standard corpora to compare open named entity recognisers
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11
Intensity of Odor and Sensory Irritation as a Function of Hexanal Concentration and Interpresentation Intervals: An Exploratory Study
In: Perceptual & motor skills. - Thousand Oaks, CA : SAGE Publications 111 (2010) 1, 210-228
OLC Linguistik
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