International audienceWhile common semantic representations for individual words across languages have been identified, a common meaning system at sentence-level has not been determined. In this study, fMRI was used to investigate whether an across-language sentence comprehension system exists. Chinese-Japanese bilingual participants (n = 32) were asked to determine whether two consecutive stimuli were related (coherent) or not (incoherent) to the same event. Stimuli were displayed with three different modalities (Chinese written sentences, Japanese written sentences, and pictures). The behavioral results showed no significant difference in accuracy and response times among the three modalities. Multi-voxel pattern analysis (MVPA) of fMRI d...
There is debate as to whether processing of semantic and syntactic information involves overlapping ...
The functional anatomy of Chinese character processing was investigated using fMRI. Right-handed Man...
How is language processed in the brain by native speakers of different languages? Is there one brain...
International audienceWhile common semantic representations for individual words across languages ha...
International audienceWhile common semantic representations for individual words across languages ha...
While common semantic representations for individual words across languages have been identified, a ...
Comprehension of visually presented sentences in fluent bilinguals was studied with functional magne...
Comprehension of visually presented sentences in fluent bilinguals was studied with functional magne...
AbstractComprehension of visually presented sentences in fluent bilinguals was studied with function...
This study extended cross-language semantic decoding (based on a concept’s fMRI signature) to the de...
A functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study was conducted to map syntactic and semantic pro...
<div>The aim of the study was to test the cross-language generative capability of a model that predi...
A general finding in English seems to be that verbs are represented in left prefrontal region and no...
The functional anatomy of Chinese character processing was investigated using fMRI. Right-handed Man...
Differences in how writing systems represent language raise important questions about whether there ...
There is debate as to whether processing of semantic and syntactic information involves overlapping ...
The functional anatomy of Chinese character processing was investigated using fMRI. Right-handed Man...
How is language processed in the brain by native speakers of different languages? Is there one brain...
International audienceWhile common semantic representations for individual words across languages ha...
International audienceWhile common semantic representations for individual words across languages ha...
While common semantic representations for individual words across languages have been identified, a ...
Comprehension of visually presented sentences in fluent bilinguals was studied with functional magne...
Comprehension of visually presented sentences in fluent bilinguals was studied with functional magne...
AbstractComprehension of visually presented sentences in fluent bilinguals was studied with function...
This study extended cross-language semantic decoding (based on a concept’s fMRI signature) to the de...
A functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study was conducted to map syntactic and semantic pro...
<div>The aim of the study was to test the cross-language generative capability of a model that predi...
A general finding in English seems to be that verbs are represented in left prefrontal region and no...
The functional anatomy of Chinese character processing was investigated using fMRI. Right-handed Man...
Differences in how writing systems represent language raise important questions about whether there ...
There is debate as to whether processing of semantic and syntactic information involves overlapping ...
The functional anatomy of Chinese character processing was investigated using fMRI. Right-handed Man...
How is language processed in the brain by native speakers of different languages? Is there one brain...