Poster no. 325INTRODUCTION:The discovery of noun or verb specific impairment in selective modalities (e.g., Caramazza & Hillis, 1991; Hillis & Caramazza, 1995) in brain-damaged patients prompted the proposal of representation of word class distinction at the word form level. Thus far, such a hypothesis has not been well testified by neuroimaging studies as seen in the comprehensive review of investigations of grammatical class effects based on lexical decision, a task mainly taps lexical form processing (Crepaldi et al., 2010). In particular, Li and his colleagues (Li et al., 2004; Chan et al., 2008; Yang et al., 2011) using Chinese two-character words reported an absence of word class effects. However, their null results could be due to th...
This study examined whether the degree of complexity of a grammatical component in a language would ...
Neuropsychological and neuroimaging studies of English and other Western languages suggest that basi...
The current study addresses the controversial issue of how different grammatical categories are neur...
The selective deficit of words that belong to certain grammatical classes (for example, nouns or ver...
Numerous studies using various techniques and methodologies have demonstrated distinctive responses ...
The neural representation of nouns and verbs has been a focus of many recent neuroimaging and neurop...
This study investigated the neural bases underlying representation of nouns and verbs at the semanti...
This paper reports a conjunction analysis between semantic relatedness judgment and semantic associa...
Poster Session D: SyntaxBackground. Numerous studies have been carried out to investigate whether a...
Background: Differences in processing nouns and verbs have been investigated intensely in psycholing...
Poster Session 1 - Psycholinguistics: no. 1136Identifying distinct neural correlates of nouns and ve...
<div><p>This study examined whether the degree of complexity of a grammatical component in a languag...
Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences v.6 is conference proceedings of 48th Annual Meeting of th...
Background: Differences in processing nouns and verbs have been investigated intensely in psycholing...
Lexical-semantic variables (such as word frequency, imageability and age of acquisition) have been s...
This study examined whether the degree of complexity of a grammatical component in a language would ...
Neuropsychological and neuroimaging studies of English and other Western languages suggest that basi...
The current study addresses the controversial issue of how different grammatical categories are neur...
The selective deficit of words that belong to certain grammatical classes (for example, nouns or ver...
Numerous studies using various techniques and methodologies have demonstrated distinctive responses ...
The neural representation of nouns and verbs has been a focus of many recent neuroimaging and neurop...
This study investigated the neural bases underlying representation of nouns and verbs at the semanti...
This paper reports a conjunction analysis between semantic relatedness judgment and semantic associa...
Poster Session D: SyntaxBackground. Numerous studies have been carried out to investigate whether a...
Background: Differences in processing nouns and verbs have been investigated intensely in psycholing...
Poster Session 1 - Psycholinguistics: no. 1136Identifying distinct neural correlates of nouns and ve...
<div><p>This study examined whether the degree of complexity of a grammatical component in a languag...
Procedia – Social and Behavioral Sciences v.6 is conference proceedings of 48th Annual Meeting of th...
Background: Differences in processing nouns and verbs have been investigated intensely in psycholing...
Lexical-semantic variables (such as word frequency, imageability and age of acquisition) have been s...
This study examined whether the degree of complexity of a grammatical component in a language would ...
Neuropsychological and neuroimaging studies of English and other Western languages suggest that basi...
The current study addresses the controversial issue of how different grammatical categories are neur...