This editorial accompanies a special issue of Brain and Language re-visiting old themes and new leads in the electrophysiology of language. The event-related potential (ERP) as a series of characteristic deflections (“components”) over time and their distribution on the scalp has been exploited by speech and language researchers over decades to find support for diverse psycholinguistic models. Fortunately, methodological and statistical advances have allowed human neuroscience to move beyond some of the limitations imposed when looking at the ERP only. Most importantly, we currently witness a refined and refreshed look at “event-related” (in the literal sense) brain activity that relates itself more closely to the actual neurobiology of spe...
The seemingly effortless switching between languages and the merging of two languages into a coheren...
Recordings of electrical activity generated in the brain in response to specific stimuli now provide...
Although language is a tool for communication, most research in the neuroscience of language has foc...
The evoked, event-related potential of the EEG has been extensively employed to study language proce...
This text offers a practical overview of biological and technological aspects of an electromagnetic ...
Speech production long avoided electrophysiological experiments due to the suspicion that potential ...
A review of the four relevant language-related components in event-related brain potentials (ERPs) i...
Speech production long avoided electrophysiological experiments due to the suspicion that potential ...
Abstract. This article provides a basic background for the pro-fessional who is interested in utiliz...
Research into the electrophysiology of language comprehension has essentially been “speakerless.” Th...
This article discusses how cognitive neuroscience techniques are used to study language with the aim...
The paper describes the three language-related event-related brain potentials (ERP) components: the ...
Researchers have long avoided neurophysiological experiments of overt speech production due to the s...
Neurophysiological studies of language processing in the intact brain have identified 3 major event-...
One of the main challenges in the study of cognition is how to connect brain activity to cognitive p...
The seemingly effortless switching between languages and the merging of two languages into a coheren...
Recordings of electrical activity generated in the brain in response to specific stimuli now provide...
Although language is a tool for communication, most research in the neuroscience of language has foc...
The evoked, event-related potential of the EEG has been extensively employed to study language proce...
This text offers a practical overview of biological and technological aspects of an electromagnetic ...
Speech production long avoided electrophysiological experiments due to the suspicion that potential ...
A review of the four relevant language-related components in event-related brain potentials (ERPs) i...
Speech production long avoided electrophysiological experiments due to the suspicion that potential ...
Abstract. This article provides a basic background for the pro-fessional who is interested in utiliz...
Research into the electrophysiology of language comprehension has essentially been “speakerless.” Th...
This article discusses how cognitive neuroscience techniques are used to study language with the aim...
The paper describes the three language-related event-related brain potentials (ERP) components: the ...
Researchers have long avoided neurophysiological experiments of overt speech production due to the s...
Neurophysiological studies of language processing in the intact brain have identified 3 major event-...
One of the main challenges in the study of cognition is how to connect brain activity to cognitive p...
The seemingly effortless switching between languages and the merging of two languages into a coheren...
Recordings of electrical activity generated in the brain in response to specific stimuli now provide...
Although language is a tool for communication, most research in the neuroscience of language has foc...