Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
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Is the Motor System Necessary for Processing Action and Abstract Emotion Words? Evidence from Focal Brain Lesions.Feature-Specific Event-Related Potential Effects to Action- and Sound-Related Verbs during Visual Word Recognition.The origin of word-related motor activity.Somatotopic Semantic Priming and Prediction in the Motor System.Age-related vulnerability in the neural systems supporting semantic processing.Pupillary Responses to Words That Convey a Sense of Brightness or Darkness.Action relevance in linguistic context drives word-induced motor activityEmpirically grounding grounded cognition: the case of colorLanguage comprehension in the balance: the robustness of the action-compatibility effect (ACE).Effect of action verbs on the performance of a complex movementEarly Parallel Activation of Semantics and Phonology in Picture Naming: Evidence from a Multiple Linear Regression MEG StudyContributions to a neurophysiology of meaning: the interpretation of written messages could be an automatic stimulus-reaction mechanism before becoming conscious processing of informationParkinson's disease disrupts both automatic and controlled processing of action verbsAre abstract action words embodied? An fMRI investigation at the interface between language and motor cognition.Motor activation in literal and non-literal sentences: does time matter?Abstract conceptual feature ratings: the role of emotion, magnitude, and other cognitive domains in the organization of abstract conceptual knowledge.Fronto-temporal regions encode the manner of motion in spatial language.A piece of the action: modulation of sensory-motor regions by action idioms and metaphors.Insights into the origins of knowledge from the cognitive neuroscience of blindness.For a cognitive neuroscience of concepts: Moving beyond the grounding issue.Influence of biological kinematics on abstract concept processing.Action sentences activate sensory motor regions in the brain independently of their status of reality.Clustering the lexicon in the brain: a meta-analysis of the neurofunctional evidence on noun and verb processing.For a new look at 'lexical errors': evidence from semantic approximations with verbs in aphasia.Mapping nouns and finite verbs in left hemisphere tumors: a direct electrical stimulation study.What is embodied about cognition?Introducing the special topic "The when and why of sensorimotor processes in conceptual knowledge and abstract concepts"Selective imitation impairments differentially interact with language processing.Object-action dissociation: A voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping study on 102 patients after glioma removal.Contingencies between verbs, body parts, and argument structures in maternal and child speech: a corpus study
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P2860
Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
description
article científic
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article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on April 2011
@en
vedecký článok
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vetenskaplig artikel
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videnskabelig artikel
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vědecký článek
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name
Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
@en
Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
@nl
type
label
Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
@en
Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
@nl
prefLabel
Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
@en
Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
@nl
P2860
P1476
Perception, action, and word meanings in the human brain: the case from action verbs.
@en
P2093
Alfonso Caramazza
Marina Bedny
P2860
P356
10.1111/J.1749-6632.2011.06013.X
P407
P577
2011-04-01T00:00:00Z