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期刊名:Language cognition and neuroscience

缩写:LANG COGN NEUROSCI

ISSN:2327-3798

e-ISSN:2327-3801

IF/分区:1.8/Q1

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共收录本刊相关文章索引181
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Meredith Brown,Anne Pier Salverda,Christine Gunlogson et al. Meredith Brown et al.
Two visual-world experiments investigated whether and how quickly discourse-based expectations about the prosodic realization of spoken words modulate interpretation of acoustic-prosodic cues. Experiment 1 replicated effects of segmental le...
Simon Fischer-Baum,Danielle S Dickson,Kara D Federmeier Simon Fischer-Baum
Many theories of visual word processing assume obligatory semantic access and phonological recoding whenever a written word is encountered. However, the relative importance of different reading processes depends on task. The current study u...
Megan Reilly,Sheila E Blumstein Megan Reilly
Spoken word production research has shown that phonological information influences lexical selection. It remains unclear, however, whether this phonological information is specified for its phonological environment (e.g., word position) or ...
Timothy Leffel,Miriam Lauter,Masha Westerlund et al. Timothy Leffel et al.
Recent research on the brain mechanisms underlying language processing has implicated the left anterior temporal lobe (LATL) as a central region for the composition of simple phrases. Because these studies typically present their critical s...
Lisa Garnand Dawdy-Hesterberg,Janet Breckenridge Pierrehumbert Lisa Garnand Dawdy-Hesterberg
The noun plural system in Modern Standard Arabic lies at a nexus of critical issues in morphological learnability. The suffixing "sound" plural competes with as many as 31 non-concatenative "broken" plural patterns. Our computational analys...
Michael S Vitevitch,Holly L Storkel,Ana Clara Francisco et al. Michael S Vitevitch et al.
Previous studies showed that a new word that is similar to many known words will be learned better than a new word that is similar to few known words (Storkel et al., 2006). In the present study we created novel words that were phonological...
Z K Agnew,H van de Koot,C McGettigan et al. Z K Agnew et al.
This study focuses on the neural processing of English sentences containing unergative, unaccusative and transitive verbs. We demonstrate common responses in bilateral superior temporal gyri in response to listening to sentences containing ...
Keith S Apfelbaum,Natasha Bullock-Rest,Ariane E Rhone et al. Keith S Apfelbaum et al.
The speech signal is notoriously variable, with the same phoneme realized differently depending on factors like talker and phonetic context. Variance in the speech signal has led to a proliferation of theories of how listeners recognize spe...
Cassandra L Jacobs,Gary S Dell Cassandra L Jacobs
Do we say dog when we say hotdog? In five experiments using the implicit priming paradigm, we assessed whether nominal compounds composed of two free morphemes like sawdust or fishbowl are prepared for production at the segmental level in t...
Brian Dillon,Charles Clifton Jr,Lyn Frazier Brian Dillon
In the current work, we test the hypothesis that 'at-issue' and 'not-at-issue' content (Potts, 2005) are processed semi-independently. In a written rating study comparing restrictive relative clauses and parentheticals in interrogatives and...