Behavioural evidence suggests that English regular past tense forms are automatically decomposed into their stem and affix (played = play+ed) based on an implicit linguistic rule, which does not apply to the idiosyncratically formed irregular forms (kept). Additionally, regular, but not irregular inflections, are thought to be processed through the procedural memory system (left inferior frontal gyrus, basal ganglia, cerebellum). It has been suggested that this distinction does not to apply to second language (L2) learners of English; however, this has not been tested at the brain level. This fMRI study used a masked-priming task with regular and irregular prime-target pairs (played-play/kept-keep) to investigate morphological processing i...
As the neural substrates of second language (L2) acquisition are largely unknown, they may or may no...
Neuropsychological evidence and recent rTMS studies strongly suggest that damage or inhibition of le...
The Persian language can be considered to have a relatively more complex and combinatorial morpho-sy...
Behavioural evidence suggests that English regular past tense forms are automatically decomposed int...
The nature of morphological processing has been a focus of research in the cognitive neurosciences o...
This paper reports results from masked priming experiments investigating regular past-tense forms an...
. .To explain processing differences between regular e.g., startrstarted and irregular e.g., thinkrt...
The authors compared performance on two variants of the primed lexical decision task to investigate ...
In this fMRI long-lag priming study, we investigated the processing of Dutch semantically transparen...
Contains fulltext : 131831.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In this functio...
Current research suggests that language comprehension engages two joint but functionally distinguish...
This paper reports results of a replication and extension of Silva & Clahsen (2008). We used the mas...
Most neuroimaging studies examining verb morphology have focused on verb tense, with fewer examining...
Neuropsychological research showing that the regular (“jump–jumped”) and irregular (“drive/drove”) p...
Calabrese P, Neufeld H, Falk A, et al. Word generation in bilinguals - fMRI study with implications ...
As the neural substrates of second language (L2) acquisition are largely unknown, they may or may no...
Neuropsychological evidence and recent rTMS studies strongly suggest that damage or inhibition of le...
The Persian language can be considered to have a relatively more complex and combinatorial morpho-sy...
Behavioural evidence suggests that English regular past tense forms are automatically decomposed int...
The nature of morphological processing has been a focus of research in the cognitive neurosciences o...
This paper reports results from masked priming experiments investigating regular past-tense forms an...
. .To explain processing differences between regular e.g., startrstarted and irregular e.g., thinkrt...
The authors compared performance on two variants of the primed lexical decision task to investigate ...
In this fMRI long-lag priming study, we investigated the processing of Dutch semantically transparen...
Contains fulltext : 131831.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In this functio...
Current research suggests that language comprehension engages two joint but functionally distinguish...
This paper reports results of a replication and extension of Silva & Clahsen (2008). We used the mas...
Most neuroimaging studies examining verb morphology have focused on verb tense, with fewer examining...
Neuropsychological research showing that the regular (“jump–jumped”) and irregular (“drive/drove”) p...
Calabrese P, Neufeld H, Falk A, et al. Word generation in bilinguals - fMRI study with implications ...
As the neural substrates of second language (L2) acquisition are largely unknown, they may or may no...
Neuropsychological evidence and recent rTMS studies strongly suggest that damage or inhibition of le...
The Persian language can be considered to have a relatively more complex and combinatorial morpho-sy...