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A common neural hub resolves syntactic and non-syntactic conflict through cooperation with task-specific networks.
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Language Science Meets Cognitive Science: Categorization and Adaptation ...
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Abstract:
Questions of domain-generality—the extent to which multiple cognitive functions are represented and processed in the same manner—are common topics of discussion in cognitive science, particularly within the realm of language. In the present dissertation, I examine the domain-specificity of two processes in speech perception: category learning and rate adaptation. With regard to category learning, I probed the acquisition of categories of German fricatives by English and German native speakers, finding a bias in both groups towards quicker acquisition of non-disjunctive categories than their disjunctive counterparts. However, a study using an analogous continuum of non-speech sounds, in this case spectrally-rotated musical instrument sounds, did not show such a bias, suggesting that at least some attributes of the phonetic category learning process are unique to speech. For rate adaptation, meanwhile, I first report a study examining rate adaptation in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), where consonant length is a ...
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Keyword:
Categorization; Cognitive psychology; Domain-specificity; FOS Clinical medicine; FOS Languages and literature; Linguistics; Neurosciences; Phonetics; Psycholinguistics; Rate adaptation; Speech perception
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URL: http://drum.lib.umd.edu/handle/1903/19498 https://dx.doi.org/10.13016/m26p3j
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Language Science Meets Cognitive Science: Categorization and Adaptation
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Further Exploring Processing Differences Between Geometric Shapes and Shape Words
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In: Electronic Theses and Dissertations (2016)
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Linguistic explanation and domain specialization: a case study in bound variable anaphora
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Attention and executive control during lexical processing in aphasia
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Using a Delayed Match-to-Samples Task to Investigate the Isolated Processing of Geometric Shapes and Their Corresponding Shape Words
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In: Georgia Southern University Research Symposium (2015)
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Resisting Everything Except Temptation: Evidence and an Explanation for Domain-Specific Impulsivity
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In: Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations (2012)
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Comparison of Instrumentalists and Vocalists on a Lexical Tone Perception Task
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The Contribution of Domain Specificity in the Highly Modular Mind
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In: Robert J. Stainton (2010)
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Theory of mind broad and narrow: Reasoning about social exchange engages ToM areas, precautionary reasoning does not
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In: Ermer, Elsa; Guerin, Scoft A.; Cosmides, Leda; Tooby, John; & Miller, Michael B.(2006). Theory of mind broad and narrow: Reasoning about social exchange engages ToM areas, precautionary reasoning does not. SOCIAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1, 196 - 219. UC Santa Barbara: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6c53x1nx (2006)
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The Case for Modularity: Sin or Salvation?
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In: Evolution and Cognition ; https://jeannicod.ccsd.cnrs.fr/ijn_00000135 ; Evolution and Cognition, 2001, 7 (1), pp.46-55 (2001)
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Grammatical knowledge vs. syntactic processing in the human brain
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In: http://cuny2012.commons.gc.cuny.edu/files/2012/03/cuny2012_98.pdf
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How Does the Mind Work? Insights from Biology
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In: http://www.psych.nyu.edu/gary/marcusArticles/Marcus 2009 topics.pdf
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