AbstractHigh and low tones on Swedish word stems are associated with different classes of suffixes. We tested the electrophysiological effects of high and low stem tones as well as tonally cued and uncued suffixes. Two different tasks were used involving either choosing the suffix-dependent meaning of the words, or pressing a button when the word ended. To determine whether effects were in fact due to association of tones with lexical material, delexicalized stimuli were also used. High tones in lexical items produced an increase in the P2 component in both tasks, interpreted as showing passive anticipatory attention allocated to the associated upcoming suffix. This effect was absent for delexicalized forms, where instead an N1 increase was...
The present contribution presents event-related potential (ERP) and functional magnetic resonance im...
All words in Swedish have a particular melody. There are two tonal patterns that are observed in dif...
The present thesis investigated how listeners use prosody to rapidly predict upcoming lexical and sy...
High and low tones on Swedish word stems are associated with different classes of suffixes. We teste...
AbstractHigh and low tones on Swedish word stems are associated with different classes of suffixes. ...
Results from the present event-related potentials (ERP) study show that tones on Swedish word stems ...
Lexical frequency effects on word accent processing in SwedishSeveral studies have investigated the ...
AbstractPrevious studies distinguish between right hemisphere-dominant processing of prosodic/tonal ...
IntroductionThis contribution presents recent research results on segmental andsuprasegmental cues t...
The morphosyntactic nature of word accents in Swedish makes them a perfect candidate for the study o...
Results are presented which indicate that high stem tones realizing word accents activate a certain ...
Swedish native speakers (NSs) unconsciously use tones realized on word stems to predict upcoming suf...
Native speakers of Swedish use tones on stems to predict which suffix is to follow. This is seen beh...
The present study investigated the relationship between linguistic tone processing and cortical thic...
Previous studies distinguish between right hemisphere-dominant processing of prosodic/tonal informat...
The present contribution presents event-related potential (ERP) and functional magnetic resonance im...
All words in Swedish have a particular melody. There are two tonal patterns that are observed in dif...
The present thesis investigated how listeners use prosody to rapidly predict upcoming lexical and sy...
High and low tones on Swedish word stems are associated with different classes of suffixes. We teste...
AbstractHigh and low tones on Swedish word stems are associated with different classes of suffixes. ...
Results from the present event-related potentials (ERP) study show that tones on Swedish word stems ...
Lexical frequency effects on word accent processing in SwedishSeveral studies have investigated the ...
AbstractPrevious studies distinguish between right hemisphere-dominant processing of prosodic/tonal ...
IntroductionThis contribution presents recent research results on segmental andsuprasegmental cues t...
The morphosyntactic nature of word accents in Swedish makes them a perfect candidate for the study o...
Results are presented which indicate that high stem tones realizing word accents activate a certain ...
Swedish native speakers (NSs) unconsciously use tones realized on word stems to predict upcoming suf...
Native speakers of Swedish use tones on stems to predict which suffix is to follow. This is seen beh...
The present study investigated the relationship between linguistic tone processing and cortical thic...
Previous studies distinguish between right hemisphere-dominant processing of prosodic/tonal informat...
The present contribution presents event-related potential (ERP) and functional magnetic resonance im...
All words in Swedish have a particular melody. There are two tonal patterns that are observed in dif...
The present thesis investigated how listeners use prosody to rapidly predict upcoming lexical and sy...