During language comprehension, semantic contextual information is used to generate expectations about upcoming items. This has been commonly studied through the N400 event-related potential (ERP), as a measure of facilitated lexical retrieval. However, the associative relationships in multi-word expressions (MWE) may enable the generation of a categorical expectation, leading to lexical retrieval before target word onset. Processing of the target word would thus reflect a target-identification mechanism, possibly indexed by a P3 ERP component. However, given their time overlap (200-500 ms post-stimulus onset), differentiating between N400/P3 ERP responses (averaged over multiple linguistically variable trials) is problematic. In the present...
The relationship between the evoked responses (ERPs/ERFs) and the event-related changes in EEG/MEG p...
There is broad agreement that context-based predictions facilitate lexical-semantic processing. A ro...
The relationship between the evoked responses (ERPs/ERFs) and the event-related changes in EEG/MEG p...
Two experiments examine the links between neural patterns in EEG (e.g., N400s, P600s) and their corr...
Previous research into written language comprehension has been equivocal as to whether word frequenc...
This study attempts a novel identification of event-related brain potential (ERP) components of anti...
Language understanding requires the integration of the input with preceding context. Event-related p...
A late neurophysiological response, the N400, is well known to reflect word processing and semantic ...
This study investigated whether a prior context influenced lexical access as indexed by participants...
Contains fulltext : 14062-OA.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)An event-rela...
One of the main challenges in the study of cognition is how to connect brain activity to cognitive p...
Readers may use contextual information to anticipate and pre-activate specific lexical items during ...
Contains fulltext : 132194.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Reading times o...
Although there is broad agreement that top-down expectations can facilitate lexical–semantic process...
There is broad agreement that context-based predictions facilitate lexical-semantic processing. A ro...
The relationship between the evoked responses (ERPs/ERFs) and the event-related changes in EEG/MEG p...
There is broad agreement that context-based predictions facilitate lexical-semantic processing. A ro...
The relationship between the evoked responses (ERPs/ERFs) and the event-related changes in EEG/MEG p...
Two experiments examine the links between neural patterns in EEG (e.g., N400s, P600s) and their corr...
Previous research into written language comprehension has been equivocal as to whether word frequenc...
This study attempts a novel identification of event-related brain potential (ERP) components of anti...
Language understanding requires the integration of the input with preceding context. Event-related p...
A late neurophysiological response, the N400, is well known to reflect word processing and semantic ...
This study investigated whether a prior context influenced lexical access as indexed by participants...
Contains fulltext : 14062-OA.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)An event-rela...
One of the main challenges in the study of cognition is how to connect brain activity to cognitive p...
Readers may use contextual information to anticipate and pre-activate specific lexical items during ...
Contains fulltext : 132194.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Reading times o...
Although there is broad agreement that top-down expectations can facilitate lexical–semantic process...
There is broad agreement that context-based predictions facilitate lexical-semantic processing. A ro...
The relationship between the evoked responses (ERPs/ERFs) and the event-related changes in EEG/MEG p...
There is broad agreement that context-based predictions facilitate lexical-semantic processing. A ro...
The relationship between the evoked responses (ERPs/ERFs) and the event-related changes in EEG/MEG p...