Syntactic gender and semantic expectancy: ERPs reveal early autonomy and late interaction.
about
Toward a neural basis of music perception - a review and updated model.Effects of Type of Agreement Violation and Utterance Position on the Auditory Processing of Subject-Verb Agreement: An ERP StudyTemporally Regular Musical Primes Facilitate Subsequent Syntax Processing in Children with Specific Language Impairment.Interaction between syntax processing in language and in music: an ERP Study.The grammar of visual narrative: Neural evidence for constituent structure in sequential image comprehension.The N400 Effect during Speaker-Switch-Towards a Conversational Approach of Measuring Neural Correlates of Language.Prediction Signatures in the Brain: Semantic Pre-Activation during Language Comprehension.Differences in electric brain responses to melodies and chords.Effects of selective attention on syntax processing in music and language.Active search for antecedents in cataphoric pronoun resolution.Electrophysiology of subject-verb agreement mediated by speakers' gender.Clitic pronouns reveal the time course of processing gender and number in a second language.The influence of task-irrelevant music on language processing: syntactic and semantic structures.Thirty years and counting: finding meaning in the N400 component of the event-related brain potential (ERP).Additive effects of repetition and predictability during comprehension: evidence from event-related potentials.Time-driven effects on processing grammatical agreement.New is not always costly: evidence from online processing of topic and contrast in Japanese.Second Language Acquisition of Gender Agreement in Explicit and Implicit Training Conditions: An Event-Related Potential Study.An ERP study of regular and irregular English past tense inflection.Syntactic learning by mere exposure--an ERP study in adult learnersERP evidence for different strategies in the processing of case markers in native speakers and non-native learnersThe role of literal meaning in figurative language comprehension: evidence from masked priming ERP.Renewal of the neurophysiology of language: functional neuroimaging.To electrify bilingualism: Electrophysiological insights into bilingual metaphor comprehensionDistinguishing neurocognitive processes reflected by P600 effects: evidence from ERPs and neural oscillations.Grammar or serial order?: discrete combinatorial brain mechanisms reflected by the syntactic mismatch negativity.Localization of syntactic and semantic brain responses using magnetoencephalography.Flexible composition: MEG evidence for the deployment of basic combinatorial linguistic mechanisms in response to task demands.Representational deficit or processing effect? An electrophysiological study of noun-noun compound processing by very advanced L2 speakers of English.An ERP study of syntactic processing in English and nonsense sentences.Potato not Pope: human brain potentials to gender expectation and agreement in Spanish spoken sentencesAnticipating words and their gender: an event-related brain potential study of semantic integration, gender expectancy, and gender agreement in Spanish sentence reading.When zebras become painted donkeys: Grammatical gender and semantic priming interact during picture integration in a spoken Spanish sentence.Expecting gender: an event related brain potential study on the role of grammatical gender in comprehending a line drawing within a written sentence in Spanish.Action Priority: Early Neurophysiological Interaction of Conceptual and Motor Representations.Electrophysiological Correlates of Second-Language Syntactic Processes Are Related to Native and Second Language Distance Regardless of Age of Acquisition.Grammatical markers switch roles and elicit different electrophysiological responses under shallow and deep semantic requirements.Where syntax meets math: right intraparietal sulcus activation in response to grammatical number agreement violations.Morphosyntax can modulate the N400 component: event related potentials to gender-marked post-nominal adjectives.The fox and the cabra: an ERP analysis of reading code switched nouns and verbs in bilingual short stories.
P2860
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P2860
Syntactic gender and semantic expectancy: ERPs reveal early autonomy and late interaction.
description
2000 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2000年の論文
@ja
2000年論文
@yue
2000年論文
@zh-hant
2000年論文
@zh-hk
2000年論文
@zh-mo
2000年論文
@zh-tw
2000年论文
@wuu
2000年论文
@zh
2000年论文
@zh-cn
name
Syntactic gender and semantic ...... autonomy and late interaction.
@en
type
label
Syntactic gender and semantic ...... autonomy and late interaction.
@en
prefLabel
Syntactic gender and semantic ...... autonomy and late interaction.
@en
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Syntactic gender and semantic ...... autonomy and late interaction.
@en
P2093
Friederici AD
Schriefers H
P2860
P304
P356
10.1162/089892900562336
P577
2000-07-01T00:00:00Z