Search results for "neurolinguistics"

showing 10 items of 10 documents

How the Context Matters. Literal and Figurative Meaning in the Embodied Language Paradigm

2014

The involvement of the sensorimotor system in language understanding has been widely demonstrated. However, the role of context in these studies has only recently started to be addressed. Though words are bearers of a semantic potential, meaning is the product of a pragmatic process. It needs to be situated in a context to be disambiguated. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that embodied simulation occurring during linguistic processing is contextually modulated to the extent that the same sentence, depending on the context of utterance, leads to the activation of different effector-specific brain motor areas. In order to test this hypothesis, we asked subjects to give a moto…

AdultDeep linguistic processinglcsh:MedicineSocial SciencesContext (language use)Literal and figurative languageEmbodied Language ParadigmSentence processingYoung AdultNeurolinguisticsPsychologyHumanslcsh:Scienceidioms.Settore M-FIL/05 - Filosofia E Teoria Dei LinguaggiLanguageMultidisciplinarymotor simjulationFootlcsh:RContextCognitive PsychologyBiology and Life SciencesHandPhilosophyMetaphorCognitive Sciencelcsh:QPsychologyPsychomotor PerformanceUtteranceSentenceResearch ArticleNeuroscienceMeaning (linguistics)Cognitive psychologyPLoS ONE
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Yes, you can? A speaker’s potency to act upon his words orchestrates early neural responses to message-level meaning

2013

Evidence is accruing that, in comprehending language, the human brain rapidly integrates a wealth of information sources-including the reader or hearer's knowledge about the world and even his/her current mood. However, little is known to date about how language processing in the brain is affected by the hearer's knowledge about the speaker. Here, we investigated the impact of social attributions to the speaker by measuring event-related brain potentials while participants watched videos of three speakers uttering true or false statements pertaining to politics or general knowledge: a top political decision maker (the German Federal Minister of Finance at the time of the experiment), a well…

AdultMaleCognitive NeurosciencePolitical Sciencelcsh:MedicineState of affairsSocial and Behavioral Sciencesspeech perceptionPsycholinguisticsYoung AdultCognitionNeurolinguisticsMedicineHumansSpeechPsychologyGeneral knowledgeMeaning (existential)lcsh:ScienceEvoked PotentialsBiologyNeurolinguisticsLanguageMultidisciplinaryPsycholinguisticsSocial perceptionbusiness.industrylcsh:Rlanguage processingCognitive PsychologyLinguisticsExperimental PsychologyN400SemanticsComprehensionSocial PerceptionPublic OpinionFemalelcsh:QbusinessComprehensionneurophysiologNatural LanguageCognitive psychologyResearch ArticleNeuroscience
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(De-)Accentuation and the Processing of Information Status: Evidence from Event-Related Brain Potentials

2012

The paper reports on a perception experiment in German that investigated the neuro-cognitive processing of information structural concepts and their prosodic marking using event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Experimental conditions controlled the information status (given vs. new) of referring and non-referring target expressions (nouns vs. adjectives) and were elicited via context sentences, which did not – unlike most previous ERP studies in the field – trigger an explicit focus expectation. Target utterances displayed prosodic realizations of the critical words which differed in accent position and accent type. Electrophysiological results showed an effect of information status, maxi…

AdultMaleLinguistics and LanguageSound SpectrographySpeech perceptionSociology and Political ScienceConcept FormationContingent Negative VariationContext (language use)Speech AcousticsLanguage and LinguisticsYoung AdultSpeech and HearingNeurolinguisticsEvent-related potentialStress (linguistics)HumansNeurolinguistic ProgrammingDominance CerebralEvoked PotentialsCerebral CortexBrain MappingPitch accentElectroencephalographySignal Processing Computer-AssistedGeneral MedicineLinguisticsN400SemanticsFocus (linguistics)Speech PerceptionFemaleCuesPsychologypsychological phenomena and processesLanguage and Speech
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Communicative guide for key conversational partners in the context of 'afasic conversation'

2005

Con este trabajo presentamos una Guía comunicativa diseñada para los interlocutores-clave (Whitworth, Perkins y Lesser 1997) que participan en conversaciones donde se incluye algún hablante con afasia. La necesidad de este tipo de guías surgió durante la elaboración del corpus PerLA ("PERcepción, Lenguaje y Afasia"), iniciado en 2000 en el área de Lingüística General de la UVEG. Presentamos algunos trabajos anteriores que abordan el tema de los interlocutores, como el Protocolo Pragmático diseñado por Carol Prutting y Diane Kirchner, el Entrenamiento conversacional de Audrey Holland, y la Terapia de Conversación Asistida de Aura Kagan. Los datos confirman que en estas situaciones ambos tipo…

Corpus linguisticsPragmaticsAfasiaLingüística de corpusNeurolingüísticaAphasiaAnàlisi del discursConversational eficiencyEficacia conversacionalPragmáticaNeurolinguistics
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A diffusion model account of normal and impaired readers.

2004

Acquired aphasics and dyslexics with even very profound word reading impairments have been shown to perform relatively well on the lexical decision task (e.g., Buchanan, Hildebrandt, & MacKinnon, 1999), but direct contrasts with unimpaired participants data is often complicated by extremely long reaction times for patient data. The dissociation between lexical decision and word naming performance shown by these patients is of theoretical importance, and here we present an analysis of processing underlying the lexical decision task. We are able to determine what aspects of performance are affected by acquired aphasics in the lexical decision task. We fit lexical decision data from aphasic pa…

Dissociation (neuropsychology)Cognitive NeuroscienceDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyModels PsychologicalLexiconChoice BehaviorDyslexiaArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)NeurolinguisticsAphasiaDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyLexical decision taskmedicineAphasiaReaction TimeHumansLanguage disordercomputer.programming_languageCognitionmedicine.diseaseLinguisticsSemanticsStrokeNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyReadingHealthBrain Damage ChronicLexicomedicine.symptomPsychologycomputerCognitive psychologyBrain and cognition
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Motor and linguistic linking of space and time in the cerebellum

2009

Background: Recent literature documented the presence of spatial-temporal interactions in the human brain. The aim of the present study was to verify whether representation of past and future is also mapped onto spatial representations and whether the cerebellum may be a neural substrate for linking space and time in the linguistic domain. We asked whether processing of the tense of a verb is influenced by the space where response takes place and by the semantics of the verb. Principal Findings: Responses to past tense were facilitated in the left space while responses to future tense were facilitated in the right space. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) of the right cereb…

Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)Time FactorsNeural substratelcsh:MedicinePoison controlSpace (commercial competition)LinguisticBiochemistryVocabularyPsycholinguisticsAdult; Brain Mapping; Cerebellum; Humans; Language; Motor Skills; Psycholinguistics; Reaction Time; Reproducibility of Results; Semantics; Time Factors; Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation; Verbal Behavior; Vocabulary; Linguistics; Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)Cerebellumlcsh:ScienceMotor skilltimeLanguageMotor SkillBrain MappingMultidisciplinaryNeuroscience/Behavioral NeurosciencePsycholinguisticsMedicine (all)PsycholinguisticTranscranial Magnetic StimulationLinguisticsNeuroscience/Experimental PsychologySemanticsNeuroscience/PsychologyMotor Skillsspace; time; past; future; cerebellumPsycholinguistics; Verbal Behavior; Reproducibility of Results; Humans; Cerebellum; Vocabulary; Motor Skills; Semantics; Brain Mapping; Adult; Language; Linguistics; Time Factors; Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation; Reaction TimeSettore MED/26 - NeurologiaResearch ArticleHumanfutureAdultTime FactorReproducibility of ResultVerbBiologySemanticsNONeurolinguisticsReaction TimeHumanspastNeuroscience/Cognitive NeuroscienceBiochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)Settore M-PSI/02 - Psicobiologia E Psicologia FisiologicaVerbal Behaviorlcsh:RReproducibility of ResultsLinguisticsspacecerebellum language spaceAgricultural and Biological Sciences (all)lcsh:QSemantic
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A co-registration investigation of inter-word spacing and parafoveal preview: Eye movements and fixation-related potentials

2019

Participants’ eye movements (EMs) and EEG signal were simultaneously recorded to examine foveal and parafoveal processing during sentence reading. All the words in the sentence were manipulated for inter-word spacing (intact spaces vs. spaces replaced by a random letter) and parafoveal preview (identical preview vs. random letter string preview). We observed disruption for unspaced text and invalid preview conditions in both EMs and fixation-related potentials (FRPs). Unspaced and invalid preview conditions received longer reading times than spaced and valid preview conditions. In addition, the FRP data showed that unspaced previews disrupted reading in earlier time windows of analysis, com…

MaleTime FactorsEye MovementsPhysiologyVisual SystemVisionComputer scienceSpeech recognitionSensory PhysiologyVisual PhysiologySocial ScienceslukeminensilmänliikkeetOcular physiology0302 clinical medicineFovealMedicine and Health SciencesPsychologyAttentionMacula LuteaEEGNeurolinguisticsClinical NeurophysiologyBrain MappingMultidisciplinaryQ05 social sciencesRElectroencephalographyHealthy VolunteersSensory SystemsSemanticsElectrophysiologyBioassays and Physiological AnalysisPattern Recognition VisualBrain ElectrophysiologyPhysical SciencestekstinymmärtäminenMedicineFemaleSensory PerceptionAnatomyResearch ArticleAdultAdolescentImaging TechniquesPermutationScienceNeurophysiologyCo registrationNeuroimagingFixation OcularResearch and Analysis Methods050105 experimental psychologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesScalpDiscrete MathematicsElectrophysiological TechniquesCognitive PsychologyBiology and Life SciencesEye movementLinguisticsReadingSentence ProcessingCombinatoricsFixation (visual)katseenseurantaCognitive ScienceClinical MedicineHeadMathematics030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeurosciencePLOS ONE
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Subjective impressions do not mirror online reading effort: concurrent EEG-eyetracking evidence from the reading of books and digital media

2013

In the rapidly changing circumstances of our increasingly digital world, reading is also becoming an increasingly digital experience: electronic books (e-books) are now outselling print books in the United States and the United Kingdom. Nevertheless, many readers still view e-books as less readable than print books. The present study thus used combined EEG and eyetracking measures in order to test whether reading from digital media requires higher cognitive effort than reading conventional books. Young and elderly adults read short texts on three different reading devices: a paper page, an e-reader and a tablet computer and answered comprehension questions about them while their eye movemen…

MalecognitionEye Movementslcsh:MedicineSocial and Behavioral Sciences0302 clinical medicineCognitionMicrocomputersReading (process)Psychologylcsh:ScienceNeurolinguisticsmedia_commonMultidisciplinaryPsycholinguisticsluminance05 social sciencesInformation processingContrast (statistics)CognitionElectroencephalographyExperimental PsychologyMiddle AgedEEG-Eyetracking; Reading;Books; Digital MediaFemalePsychologyComprehensionconsumer electronicsNatural LanguageCognitive psychologyResearch ArticleAdultmedia_common.quotation_subjectCognitive NeuroscienceFixation Ocularelderly050105 experimental psychologyDigital mediaContrast Sensitivity03 medical and health sciencesYoung AdultMemoryHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesWorking MemoryBiologyAgedInternetBehaviorlanguagebusiness.industryVerbal BehaviorBookslcsh:RCognitive PsychologyEye movementLinguisticseyesFixation (psychology)Comprehensioneye movementsReadinglcsh:Qbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscience
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Phonological precision for word recognition in skilled readers

2019

According to the lexical quality hypothesis (Perfetti, 2007), differences in the orthographic, semantic, and phonological representations of words will affect individual reading performance. Whilst several studies have focused on orthographic precision and semantic coherence, few have considered phonological precision. The present study used a suite of individual difference measures to assess which components of lexical quality contributed to competition resolution in a masked priming experiment. The experiment measured form priming for word and pseudoword targets with dense and sparse neighbourhoods in 84 university students. Individual difference measures of language and cognitive skills …

Physiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySemanticsSocial and Behavioral SciencesPsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics|Psycholinguistics and NeurolinguisticsPhoneticsPhysiology (medical)Reading (process)Reaction TimeHumansPsychologyQuality (business)bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Linguistics|Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguisticsindividual differencesLexical Quality Hypothesissemanticsbepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|LinguisticsGeneral PsychologyLanguageVDP::Humaniora: 000::Språkvitenskapelige fag: 010media_commonVisual Word recognitionVisual word recognitionorthographyCognitive PsychologyPhonologyLinguisticsGeneral Medicinebepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognitive PsychologyPsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Cognitive Psychology|LanguageFOS: PsychologyPsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral SciencesphonologyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPsycholinguistics and NeurolinguisticsPattern Recognition VisualReadingWord recognitionbepress|Social and Behavioral SciencesPsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Cognitive PsychologyFOS: Languages and literatureAffect (linguistics)PsychologyPsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|LinguisticsOrthographyCognitive psychology
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Detranslation: Spanglish from a neurolinguistic point of view

2014

Despite currently growing sociolinguistic research on Spanglish, it is a very peculiar linguistic variety, which cannot be understood without a careful analysis of its neurolinguistic background. This paper argues that a theoretical neurolinguistic view on Spanglish has to consider the cortex, where English-like words are located, the limbic system, where Spanish paradigms are stored, and the bundles of nerves that bind up both of them. Spanglish is an example of detranslation, a kind of negative translation.

SpanglishLinguistics and LanguageneurolinguisticsPoint (typography)languagedetranslationVariety (linguistics)PsychologySpanglishLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticslanguage.human_languagenegative translation
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