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The Benefits of Targeted Memory Reactivation for Consolidation in Sleep are Contingent on Memory Accuracy and Direct Cue-Memory Associations.A complementary systems account of word learning: neural and behavioural evidence.Learning and consolidation of novel spoken words.Sleep underpins the plasticity of language production.Stroop effects from newly learned color words: effects of memory consolidation and episodic context.Orthographic consistency and word-frequency effects in auditory word recognition: new evidence from lexical decision and rime detection.Does Sleep Improve Your Grammar? Preferential Consolidation of Arbitrary Components of New Linguistic Knowledge.The impact of strong assimilation on the perception of connected speech.Bedding down new words: Sleep promotes the emergence of lexical competition in visual word recognition.Frequency effects in spoken and visual word recognition: evidence from dual-task methodologies.Markers of automaticity in sleep-associated consolidation of novel words.Lexical competition and the acquisition of novel words.Representation and competition in the perception of spoken words.Novel word integration in the mental lexicon: evidence from unmasked and masked semantic priming.Learning new meanings for old words: effects of semantic relatedness.No effect of targeted memory reactivation during slow-wave sleep on emotional recognition memory.Consolidation of vocabulary during sleep: The rich get richer?Eye-tracking the time-course of novel word learning and lexical competition in adults and children.Word learning and lexical development across the lifespanThe dream-lag effect: Selective processing of personally significant events during Rapid Eye Movement sleep, but not during Slow Wave Sleep.Consolidation of vocabulary is associated with sleep in typically developing children, but not in children with dyslexia.A role for consolidation in cross-modal category learning.Sleep preserves original and distorted memory traces.Mechanisms of Memory Retrieval in Slow-Wave Sleep.Accent modulates access to word meaning: Evidence for a speaker-model account of spoken word recognition.Sleep-associated changes in the mental representation of spoken words.Newly learned spoken words show long-term lexical competition effects.Listeners and Readers Generalize Their Experience With Word Meanings Across Modalities.When the daffodat flew to the intergalactic zoo: off-line consolidation is critical for word learning from stories.Online lexical competition during spoken word recognition and word learning in children and adults.Lexical representation of schwa words: two mackerels, but only one salami.The perception of assimilation in newly learned novel words.People with dementia use schemata to support episodic memory.The nature of delayed dream incorporation ('dream-lag effect'): Personally significant events persist, but not major daily activities or concerns.Erratum to: The time course of auditory and language-specific mechanisms in compensation for sibilant assimilationReading spoken words: Orthographic effects in auditory primingThe nature of phoneme representation in spoken word recognitionPhonological variation and inference in lexical accessUnited we fall: All-or-none forgetting of complex episodic eventsA re-examination of the default system for Arabic plurals
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description
researcher ORCID ID = 0000-0001-8325-1427
@en
wetenschapper
@nl
name
M. Gareth Gaskell
@ast
M. Gareth Gaskell
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M. Gareth Gaskell
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type
label
M. Gareth Gaskell
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M. Gareth Gaskell
@en
M. Gareth Gaskell
@nl
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M. Gareth Gaskell
@ast
M. Gareth Gaskell
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M. Gareth Gaskell
@nl
P108
P21
P31
P496
0000-0001-8325-1427