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61
Rhyme processing in the brain: An ERP mapping study
Khateb, Asaid; Pegna, Alan J.; Landis, Theodor. - : ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 2007
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62
External advisor(s):
In: http://www.bth.se/fou/cuppsats.nsf/all/449af033ba2ef5acc125736e0045d807/$file/Michal.Marcinczuk_Master_Thesis_2007.09.19_bth_revised.pdf (2006)
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63
The ICSI+ Multilingual Sentence Segmentation System
In: DTIC (2006)
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64
Not every pseudoword disrupts word recognition: an ERP study
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65
Cognitive neuroimaging: Cognitive science out of the armchair
de Zubicaray, GI. - : Academic Press, 2006
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66
Event ordering using terseo system
In: http://rua.ua.es:8080/bitstream/10045/2572/1/revista.pdf (2005)
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67
CHRONOMETRY OF VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION DURING PASSIVE AND LEXICAL DECISION TASKS: AN ERP INVESTIGATION
In: Intern. J. Neuroscience ; https://hal-normandie-univ.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02951363 ; Intern. J. Neuroscience, 2004, 114, pp.1293 - 1324. ⟨10.1080/00207450490⟩ (2004)
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68
Discriminative Slot Detection Using Kernel Methods
In: DTIC (2004)
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69
Advanced Capabilities for Evidence Extraction (ACEE)
In: DTIC AND NTIS (2004)
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70
Object and action picture naming in English and Greek
In: The European journal of cognitive psychology. - Basingstoke : Psychology Press 15 (2003) 3, 371-403
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71
Familiar words capture the attention of 11-month-olds in less than 250 ms
In: http://www.york.ac.uk/media/languageandlinguistics/documents/staff/publications/Thierry et al-Neurorep03.pdf (2003)
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72
Development of face-sensitive event-related potentials during infancy: a review
In: INT J PSYCHOPHYSIOL , 51 (1) 45 - 58. (2003) (2003)
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73
Applications in pharmacokinetic modeling
Arnold, Esther. - : uga, 2003
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74
Neural correlates of consciousness : empirical and conceptual questions
Franks, Nicholas P. (Mitarb.); Nijhawan, Romi (Mitarb.); Metzinger, Thomas (Hrsg.). - Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.] : MIT Press, 2002
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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75
Motion Events in Language and Cognition
In: http://titan.cog.brown.edu:16080/~sloman/papers/Gennari_et_al.pdf (2002)
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76
Detecting latency differences in event-related BOLD responses: Application to words versus nonwords and initial versus repeated face presentations
In: NEUROIMAGE , 15 (1) 83 - 97. (2002) (2002)
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77
Developing a brain specialized for face perception: A converging methods approach
In: DEV PSYCHOBIOL , 40 (3) 200 - 212. (2002) (2002)
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78
Task-dependency of the neural correlates of episodic encoding as measured by fMRI
In: CEREB CORTEX , 11 (12) 1150 - 1160. (2001) (2001)
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79
Recollection and familiarity in recognition memory: An event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging study
In: J NEUROSCI , 19 (10) 3962 - 3972. (1999) (1999)
Abstract: The question of whether recognition memory judgments with and without recollection reflect dissociable patterns of brain activity is unresolved. We used event-related, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of 12 healthy volunteers to measure hemodynamic responses associated with both studying and recognizing words. Volunteers made one of three judgments to each word during recognition: whether they recollected seeing it during study (R judgments), whether they experienced a feeling of familiarity in the absence of recollection (K judgments), or whether they did not remember seeing it during study (N judgments). Both R and K judgments for studied words were associated with enhanced responses in left prefrontal and left parietal cortices relative to N judgments for unstudied words. The opposite pattern was observed in bilateral temporoccipital regions and amygdalae. R judgments for studied words were associated with enhanced responses in anterior left prefrontal, left parietal, and posterior cingulate regions relative to K judgments. At study, a posterior left prefrontal region exhibited an enhanced response to words subsequently given R versus K judgments, but the response of this region during recognition did not differentiate R and K judgments. K judgments for studied words were associated with enhanced responses in right lateral and medial prefrontal cortex relative to both R judgments for studied words and N judgments for unstudied words, a difference we attribute to greater monitoring demands when memory judgments are less certain. These results suggest that the responses of different brain regions do dissociate according to the phenomenology associated with memory retrieval.
Keyword: AMNESIC PATIENTS; BRAIN ACTIVITY; CONSCIOUS RECOLLECTION; EPISODIC MEMORY; episodic memory retrieval; event-related fMRI; FALSE RECOGNITION; familiarity; HIPPOCAMPAL-FORMATION; know; PET; POSITRON EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY; PREFRONTAL CORTEX; recollection; remember; RETRIEVAL SUCCESS; source
URL: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/4413/
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80
Spatio-temporal analysis of electric brain activity during semantic and phonological word processing
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