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1
Neural responses demonstrate the dynamicity of speech perception
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2
EmotionWatch: Visualizing Fine-Grained Emotions in Event-Related Tweets
In: Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media; Vol. 8 No. 1 (2014): Eighth International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media ; 2334-0770 ; 2162-3449 (2014)
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3
Temporal expression recognition using dependency trees
Mazur, Pawel; Dale, Robert. - : Switzerland : Springer Verlag, 2014
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4
Grammatical aspect and event recognition in children's online sentence comprehension
Zhou, Peng; Crain, Stephen; Zhan, Likan. - : Elsevier, 2014
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5
Semantic richness effects in visual word processing
Rabovsky, Milena. - : Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Lebenswissenschaftliche Fakultät, 2014
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6
Semantic richness effects in visual word processing ...
Rabovsky, Milena. - : Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Lebenswissenschaftliche Fakultät, 2014
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7
Face Recognition and Event Detection in Video: An Overview of PROVE-IT Projects
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8
Dynamics of alpha oscillations elucidate facial affect recognition in schizophrenia
In: Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience ; 14 (2014), 1. - S. 364-377. - ISSN 1530-7026. - eISSN 1531-135X (2014)
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9
Hemispheric differences in orthographic and semantic processing as revealed by event-related potentials
Abstract: Differences in how the right and left hemispheres (RH, LH) apprehend visual words were examined using event-related potentials (ERPs) in a repetition paradigm with visual half-field (VF) presentation. In both hemispheres (RH/LVF, LH/RVF), initial presentation of items elicited similar and typical effects of orthographic neighborhood size, with larger N400s for orthographically regular items (words and pseudowords) than for irregular items (acronyms and meaningless illegal strings). However, hemispheric differences emerged on repetition effects. When items were repeated in the LH/RVF, orthographically regular items, relative to irregular items, elicited larger repetition effects on both the N250, a component reflecting processing at the level of visual form (orthography), and on the N400, which has been linked to semantic access. In contrast, in the RH/LVF, repetition effects were biased toward irregular items on the N250 and were similar in size across item types for the N400. The results suggest that processing in the LH is more strongly affected by wordform regularity than in the RH, either due to enhanced processing of familiar orthographic patterns or due to the fact that regular forms can be more readily mapped onto phonology.
Keyword: cerebral hemispheres; event-related potentials (ERPs); N400; orthographic neighborhood; visual word recognition
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/50680
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10
Hemispheric asymmetries in word recognition as revealed by the orthographic uniqueness point effect
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11
Unsupervised Event Extraction from News and Twitter ; IDEAL Computational Linguistics Prototype
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