Compound words make up a major part of modern Chinese vocabulary. Behavioral studies have demonstrated that access to lexical semantics of compound words is driven by the interaction between orthographic and phonological information. However, little is known about the neural underpins of compound word processing. In this fMRI study, we asked participants to perform lexical decision to pseudohomophones, which were constructed by replacing one or both constituents of two-character compound words with orthographically dissimilar homophonic characters. Mixed pseudohomophones, which shared the first constituent with the base words, were more difficult to reject than non-pseudohomophone nonwords. This effect was accompanied by the increased activ...
Event-related fMRI was used to investigate lexical decisions to words of high and low frequency of o...
Compounding is the dominant morphological type in modern Chinese words; however, its brain mechanism...
We investigated phonological processing in normal readers to answer the question to what extent phon...
Compound words make up a major part of modern Chinese vocabulary. Behavioral studies have demonstrat...
After Newman and Twieg ([2001]: Hum Brain Mapp 14:39-47) and others, we used a fast event-related fu...
A growing body of neuroimaging evidence has shown that Chinese character processing recruits differe...
A growing body of neuroimaging evidence has shown that Chinese character processing recruits differe...
After Newman and Twieg ([2001]: Hum Brain Mapp 14:39-47) and others, we used a fast event-related fu...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to investigate whether people generate the phonology ...
Chinese offers a unique tool for testing the effects of word form on language processing during read...
The issue of how phonological information becomes available in reading Chinese and the role that it ...
This fMRI study aimed to identify the neural mechanisms underlying the recognition of Chinese multi-...
Item does not contain fulltextEvent-related fMRI was used to investigate lexical decisions to words ...
Most of the existing models of language have been based on alphabetic languages; however, growing ev...
Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (ER-fMRI) was used to investigate how the human ...
Event-related fMRI was used to investigate lexical decisions to words of high and low frequency of o...
Compounding is the dominant morphological type in modern Chinese words; however, its brain mechanism...
We investigated phonological processing in normal readers to answer the question to what extent phon...
Compound words make up a major part of modern Chinese vocabulary. Behavioral studies have demonstrat...
After Newman and Twieg ([2001]: Hum Brain Mapp 14:39-47) and others, we used a fast event-related fu...
A growing body of neuroimaging evidence has shown that Chinese character processing recruits differe...
A growing body of neuroimaging evidence has shown that Chinese character processing recruits differe...
After Newman and Twieg ([2001]: Hum Brain Mapp 14:39-47) and others, we used a fast event-related fu...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to investigate whether people generate the phonology ...
Chinese offers a unique tool for testing the effects of word form on language processing during read...
The issue of how phonological information becomes available in reading Chinese and the role that it ...
This fMRI study aimed to identify the neural mechanisms underlying the recognition of Chinese multi-...
Item does not contain fulltextEvent-related fMRI was used to investigate lexical decisions to words ...
Most of the existing models of language have been based on alphabetic languages; however, growing ev...
Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (ER-fMRI) was used to investigate how the human ...
Event-related fMRI was used to investigate lexical decisions to words of high and low frequency of o...
Compounding is the dominant morphological type in modern Chinese words; however, its brain mechanism...
We investigated phonological processing in normal readers to answer the question to what extent phon...