Pages that link to "Q52038242"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to Establishing a time-line of word recognition: evidence from eye movements and event-related potentials. (Q52038242):
Displaying 50 items.
- Activation of the left inferior frontal gyrus in the first 200 ms of reading: evidence from magnetoencephalography (MEG) (Q21143793) (← links)
- New insights into name category-related effects: is the Age of Acquisition a possible factor? (Q21203811) (← links)
- During visual word recognition, phonology is accessed within 100 ms and may be mediated by a speech production code: evidence from magnetoencephalography (Q24617194) (← links)
- Fast, visual specialization for reading in English revealed by the topography of the N170 ERP response (Q24812983) (← links)
- Word Processing differences between dyslexic and control children (Q25256739) (← links)
- Reading between eye saccades (Q27345555) (← links)
- fMRI evidence for dual routes to the mental lexicon in visual word recognition (Q28215888) (← links)
- From orthography to phonetics: ERP measures of grapheme-to-phoneme conversion mechanisms in reading (Q28255091) (← links)
- The mechanics of embodiment: a dialog on embodiment and computational modeling (Q28743808) (← links)
- Alive and grasping: stable and rapid semantic access to an object category but not object graspability. (Q30432946) (← links)
- Immediate auditory repetition of words and nonwords: an ERP study of lexical and sublexical processing (Q30441405) (← links)
- Ultra-rapid access to words in the brain (Q30459144) (← links)
- Early and sustained supramarginal gyrus contributions to phonological processing (Q30467278) (← links)
- Neural correlates of word production stages delineated by parametric modulation of psycholinguistic variables (Q30478873) (← links)
- Language processing in reading and speech perception is fast and incremental: implications for event-related potential research (Q30484227) (← links)
- Skilled readers begin processing sub-phonemic features by 80 ms during visual word recognition: evidence from ERPs (Q30484231) (← links)
- Understanding in an instant: neurophysiological evidence for mechanistic language circuits in the brain (Q30486996) (← links)
- Effects of attention on what is known and what is not: MEG evidence for functionally discrete memory circuits. (Q30487512) (← links)
- Effects of TMS on different stages of motor and non-motor verb processing in the primary motor cortex (Q30491133) (← links)
- Orthographic familiarity, phonological legality and number of orthographic neighbours affect the onset of ERP lexical effects. (Q30493838) (← links)
- The time course of action and action-word comprehension in the human brain as revealed by neurophysiology (Q30494018) (← links)
- Lexical access and evoked traveling alpha waves (Q30576255) (← links)
- How 'love' and 'hate' differ from 'sleep': using combined electro/magnetoencephalographic data to reveal the sources of early cortical responses to emotional words (Q30583938) (← links)
- Modeling nonlinear relationships in ERP data using mixed-effects regression with R examples (Q30843323) (← links)
- A crucial temporal accuracy test of combining EEG and Tobii eye tracker (Q30844035) (← links)
- Brain mechanisms linking language and action (Q30992168) (← links)
- Grip force is part of the semantic representation of manual action verbs (Q33543099) (← links)
- To electrify bilingualism: Electrophysiological insights into bilingual metaphor comprehension (Q33570668) (← links)
- The nature of abstract orthographic codes: evidence from masked priming and magnetoencephalography (Q33593166) (← links)
- Pain-related and negative semantic priming enhances perceived pain intensity (Q33640145) (← links)
- Never Seem to Find the Time: Evaluating the Physiological Time Course of Visual Word Recognition with Regression Analysis of Single Item ERPs. (Q33768675) (← links)
- Word and pseudoword superiority effects reflected in the ERP waveform (Q33801859) (← links)
- The N400 as a snapshot of interactive processing: Evidence from regression analyses of orthographic neighbor and lexical associate effects (Q34204206) (← links)
- Does the reading of different orthographies produce distinct brain activity patterns? An ERP study (Q34277201) (← links)
- Frequency and regularity effects in reading are task dependent: Evidence from ERPs (Q34569964) (← links)
- Sex differences in semantic processing: event-related brain potentials distinguish between lower and higher order semantic analysis during word reading. (Q34583140) (← links)
- Experience-dependent hemispheric specialization of letters and numbers is revealed in early visual processing (Q34669447) (← links)
- Early prefrontal brain responses to the Hedonic quality of emotional words--a simultaneous EEG and MEG study (Q34936003) (← links)
- Verb aspect and the activation of event knowledge (Q35585439) (← links)
- Complex dynamics of semantic memory access in reading. (Q35625756) (← links)
- On the time course of visual word recognition: an event-related potential investigation using masked repetition priming (Q35659806) (← links)
- Neural correlates of foveal splitting in reading: evidence from an ERP study of Chinese character recognition (Q35809614) (← links)
- N170 ERPs could represent a logographic processing strategy in visual word recognition. (Q35825096) (← links)
- Never Say No... How the Brain Interprets the Pregnant Pause in Conversation (Q35877191) (← links)
- Won't get fooled again: An event-related potential study of task and repetition effects on the semantic processing of items without semantics. (Q35893929) (← links)
- The time-course of single-word reading: evidence from fast behavioral and brain responses (Q36057134) (← links)
- The time course of contextual effects on visual word recognition (Q36174852) (← links)
- Orthographic neighborhood effects as a function of word frequency: an event-related potential study (Q36200479) (← links)
- Action Priority: Early Neurophysiological Interaction of Conceptual and Motor Representations (Q36223579) (← links)
- Taking a Radical Position: Evidence for Position-Specific Radical Representations in Chinese Character Recognition Using Masked Priming ERP (Q36241585) (← links)