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1
A Longitudinal study on children's music training experience and academic development
Yang, Hua; Ma, Weiyi; Gong, Diankun. - : Nature Publishing Group, 2014
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2
A Longitudinal Study on Children's Music Training Experience and Academic Development
Yang, Hua; Ma, Weiyi; Gong, Diankun. - : Nature Publishing Group, 2014
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3
Bilingual Cognitive Control in Language Switching: An fMRI Study of English-Chinese Late Bilinguals
Ma, Hengfen; Hu, Jiehui; Xi, Jie. - : Public Library of Science, 2014
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4
Dissociation of tone and vowel processing in Mandarin idioms
Hu, Jiehui; Gao, Shan; Ma, Weiyi. - : Wiley-Blackwell, 2012
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5
Integration of Consonant and Pitch Processing as Revealed by the Absence of Additivity in Mismatch Negativity
Gao, Shan; Hu, Jiehui; Gong, Diankun. - : Public Library of Science, 2012
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6
Non-native homonym processing : an ERP measurement
Hu, Jiehui; Zhang, Wenpeng; Zhao, Chen. - : International Society for Bioelectromagnetism, 2011
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7
EEG evidence for directional asymmetry in Chinese nonmusicians' musical pitch perception
Abstract: The same amount of musical pitch change in different directions may be perceived as different degrees of change, such that the clockwise modulation has a shorter psychological distance from the original music than the counterclockwise modulation does. However, the finding of directional asymmetry is largely based on behavioral studies. It is unclear whether it has its electrophysiological basis. The current study examines the electrophysiological basis of directional asymmetry. Using EEG, this study examines human brain activities when listening to musical stimuli with systematically different pitch levels. The results demonstrate electrophysiological evidence for directional asymmetry by showing that the counterclockwise transposition elicited larger brain activities than the clockwise transposition. Furthermore, by testing adult nonmusicians speaking a tonal language, namely Chinese, the current study supports the universality of the finding of right hemisphere dominance of musical pitch perception, despite the previous finding that Chinese lexical tones are primarily processed in the left hemisphere. ; 4 page(s)
Keyword: 170100 Psychology; directional asymmetry; right hemisphere dominance; Tonal transposition
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/292829
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8
Dissociation of tone and segment processing of Mandarin Chinese contrasts
Hu, Jiehui; Ma, Wei; Gong, Diankun. - : Hong Kong : LSHK, 2011
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