AbstractHow long does it take the human mind to grasp the idea when hearing or reading a sentence? Neurophysiological methods looking directly at the time course of brain activity indexes of comprehension are critical for finding the answer to this question. As the dominant cognitive approaches, models of serial/cascaded and parallel processing, make conflicting predictions on the time course of psycholinguistic information access, they can be tested using neurophysiological brain activation recorded in MEG and EEG experiments. Seriality and cascading of lexical, semantic and syntactic processes receives support from late (latency ∼1/2s) sequential neurophysiological responses, especially N400 and P600. However, parallelism is substantiated...
International audienceHumans can understand spoken or written sentences presented at extremely fast ...
Oscillatory neuronal dynamics during language comprehension has been investigated at the level of si...
How is information organized in the brain during natural reading? Where and when do the required pro...
International audienceAbstract The temporal dynamics by which linguistic information becomes availab...
This work concerns the investigation of the neuronal mechanisms at the basis of language acquisition...
Human language processing involves combinatorial operations that make human communication stand out ...
Recent cognitive neuroscience research improved our understanding of where, when, how, and why langu...
Language comprehension involves the integration of multiple sources of information extremely quickly...
Item does not contain fulltextThe field of psycholinguistics is currently experiencing an explosion ...
There is an ongoing debate in cognitive neuroscience about the time course and the functional indepe...
There is an ongoing debate in cognitive neuroscience about the time course and the functional indepe...
Although language is a tool for communication, most research in the neuroscience of language has foc...
People routinely hear and understand speech at rates of 120–200 words per minute [1, 2]. Thus, speec...
This paper focuses on what electrical and magnetic recordings of human brain activity reveal about s...
Meaningful familiar stimuli and senseless unknown materials lead to different patterns of brain acti...
International audienceHumans can understand spoken or written sentences presented at extremely fast ...
Oscillatory neuronal dynamics during language comprehension has been investigated at the level of si...
How is information organized in the brain during natural reading? Where and when do the required pro...
International audienceAbstract The temporal dynamics by which linguistic information becomes availab...
This work concerns the investigation of the neuronal mechanisms at the basis of language acquisition...
Human language processing involves combinatorial operations that make human communication stand out ...
Recent cognitive neuroscience research improved our understanding of where, when, how, and why langu...
Language comprehension involves the integration of multiple sources of information extremely quickly...
Item does not contain fulltextThe field of psycholinguistics is currently experiencing an explosion ...
There is an ongoing debate in cognitive neuroscience about the time course and the functional indepe...
There is an ongoing debate in cognitive neuroscience about the time course and the functional indepe...
Although language is a tool for communication, most research in the neuroscience of language has foc...
People routinely hear and understand speech at rates of 120–200 words per minute [1, 2]. Thus, speec...
This paper focuses on what electrical and magnetic recordings of human brain activity reveal about s...
Meaningful familiar stimuli and senseless unknown materials lead to different patterns of brain acti...
International audienceHumans can understand spoken or written sentences presented at extremely fast ...
Oscillatory neuronal dynamics during language comprehension has been investigated at the level of si...
How is information organized in the brain during natural reading? Where and when do the required pro...