Despite considerable research interest, it is still an open issue as to how morphologically complex words such as “car+s” are represented and processed in the brain. We studied the neural correlates of the processing of inflected nouns in the morphologically rich Finnish language. Previous behavioral studies in Finnish have yielded a robust inflectional processing cost, i.e., inflected words are harder to recognize than otherwise matched morphologically simple words. Theoretically this effect could stem either from decomposition of inflected words into a stem and a suffix at input level and/or from subsequent recombination at the semantic–syntactic level to arrive at an interpretation of the word. To shed light on this issue, we used magnet...
Recent masked priming studies on visual word recognition have suggested that morphological decomposi...
Morphological complexity is a highly debated issue in visual word recognition. Previous neuroimaging...
Derivational morphology is a cross-linguistically dominant mechanism for word formation, combining e...
Despite considerable research interest, it is still an open issue as to how morphologically complex ...
The temporal dynamics of processing morphologically complex words was investigated by recording even...
Available online 1 September 2018.There is considerable behavioral evidence that morphologically com...
How is morphological and morphosyntactic information processed during sentence reading? Are the neur...
There is considerable behavioral evidence that morphologically complex words such as ‘tax-able’ and ...
The question of how morphologically complex words (assign-ment, listen-ed) are represented and proce...
Working memory (WM) has been described as an interface between cognition and action, or a system for...
Despite extensive behavioral research on complex word recognition, the neural mechanisms involved in...
In the current paper we discuss the mechanisms that underlie the processing of inflectional and d...
Despite extensive behavioral research on complex word recognition, the neural mechanisms involved in...
Neuroimaging studies of the reading process point to functionally distinct stages in word recognitio...
We investigated neural distinctions between inflectional and derivational morphology and their inter...
Recent masked priming studies on visual word recognition have suggested that morphological decomposi...
Morphological complexity is a highly debated issue in visual word recognition. Previous neuroimaging...
Derivational morphology is a cross-linguistically dominant mechanism for word formation, combining e...
Despite considerable research interest, it is still an open issue as to how morphologically complex ...
The temporal dynamics of processing morphologically complex words was investigated by recording even...
Available online 1 September 2018.There is considerable behavioral evidence that morphologically com...
How is morphological and morphosyntactic information processed during sentence reading? Are the neur...
There is considerable behavioral evidence that morphologically complex words such as ‘tax-able’ and ...
The question of how morphologically complex words (assign-ment, listen-ed) are represented and proce...
Working memory (WM) has been described as an interface between cognition and action, or a system for...
Despite extensive behavioral research on complex word recognition, the neural mechanisms involved in...
In the current paper we discuss the mechanisms that underlie the processing of inflectional and d...
Despite extensive behavioral research on complex word recognition, the neural mechanisms involved in...
Neuroimaging studies of the reading process point to functionally distinct stages in word recognitio...
We investigated neural distinctions between inflectional and derivational morphology and their inter...
Recent masked priming studies on visual word recognition have suggested that morphological decomposi...
Morphological complexity is a highly debated issue in visual word recognition. Previous neuroimaging...
Derivational morphology is a cross-linguistically dominant mechanism for word formation, combining e...