A controversial issue in neuro- and psycholinguistics is whether regular past-tense forms of verbs are stored lexically or generated productively by the application of abstract combinatorial schemas, for example affixation rules. The success or failure of models in accounting for this particular issue can be used to draw more general conclusions about cognition and the degree to which abstract, symbolic representations and rules are psychologically and neurobiologically real. This debate can potentially be resolved using a neurophysiological paradigm, in which alternative predictions of the brain response patterns for lexical and syntactic processing are put to the test. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to record neural responses to spo...
Brain imaging studies of English past tense inflection have found dissociations between regular and ...
OBJECTIVES Evidence of systematic double-dissociations of neural activity associated with the gen...
Dual system models postulate two distinct neural mechanisms for the processing of inflected words: i...
How regular and irregular verbs are processed remains a matter of debate. Some English-speaking pati...
AbstractHow regular and irregular verbs are processed remains a matter of debate. Some English-speak...
Neuropsychological research investigating mental grammar and lexicon has largely been based on the p...
Neuropsychological research investigating mental grammar and lexicon has largely been based on the p...
Neuropsychological research showing that the regular (“jump–jumped”) and irregular (“drive/drove”) p...
Neuropsychological research showing that the regular (“jump–jumped”) and irregular (“drive/drove”) p...
We present a neural network model of learning and processing the English past tense that is based on...
How regular and irregular verbs are processed remains a matter of debate. Some English-speaking pati...
How regular and irregular verbs are processed remains a matter of debate. Some English-speaking pati...
Objectives: Evidence of systematic double-dissociations of neural activity associated with the gener...
Most neuroimaging studies examining verb morphology have focused on verb tense, with fewer examining...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2001....
Brain imaging studies of English past tense inflection have found dissociations between regular and ...
OBJECTIVES Evidence of systematic double-dissociations of neural activity associated with the gen...
Dual system models postulate two distinct neural mechanisms for the processing of inflected words: i...
How regular and irregular verbs are processed remains a matter of debate. Some English-speaking pati...
AbstractHow regular and irregular verbs are processed remains a matter of debate. Some English-speak...
Neuropsychological research investigating mental grammar and lexicon has largely been based on the p...
Neuropsychological research investigating mental grammar and lexicon has largely been based on the p...
Neuropsychological research showing that the regular (“jump–jumped”) and irregular (“drive/drove”) p...
Neuropsychological research showing that the regular (“jump–jumped”) and irregular (“drive/drove”) p...
We present a neural network model of learning and processing the English past tense that is based on...
How regular and irregular verbs are processed remains a matter of debate. Some English-speaking pati...
How regular and irregular verbs are processed remains a matter of debate. Some English-speaking pati...
Objectives: Evidence of systematic double-dissociations of neural activity associated with the gener...
Most neuroimaging studies examining verb morphology have focused on verb tense, with fewer examining...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2001....
Brain imaging studies of English past tense inflection have found dissociations between regular and ...
OBJECTIVES Evidence of systematic double-dissociations of neural activity associated with the gen...
Dual system models postulate two distinct neural mechanisms for the processing of inflected words: i...