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Graphomotor memory in Exner’s area enhances word learning in the blind
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In: Commun Biol (2021)
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An fMRI study dissociating distance measures computed by Broca's area in movement processing: clause boundary vs. identity
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Processing Noncanonical Sentences in Broca's Region: Reflections of Movement Distance and Type
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Processing Noncanonical Sentences in Broca's Region: Reflections of Movement Distance and Type
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Abstract:
Various noncanonical sentence constructions are derived from basic sentence structures by a phrase displacement called Movement. The moved phrase (filler) leaves a silent copy at the extracted position (gap) and is reactivated when the hearer/reader passes over the gap. Consequently, memory operations are assumed to occur to establish the filler–gap link. For languages that have a relatively free word order like German, a distinct linguistic operation called Scrambling is proposed. Although Movement and Scrambling are assumed to be different linguistic operations, they both involve memory prone filler–gap processes. To clarify whether filler–gap memory processes in Scrambling and Movement differ neuroanatomically, we designed a functional magnetic resonance imaging study and compared the effect of memory load parameterized by filler–gap distance in the 2 sentence types. Here, we show that processing of the 2 sentence types commonly relies on a left hemispheric network consisting of the inferior frontal gyrus, middle part of the middle temporal gyrus, and intraparietal sulcus. However, we found differences for the 2 sentence types in the linearity of filler–gap distance effect. Thus, the present results suggest that the same neural substrate supports the memory processes of sentences constructed by Movement and Scrambling, although differentially modulated by memory load.
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Keyword:
Articles
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22437052 https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhs058 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3563336
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Processing Noncanonical Sentences in Broca's Region: Reflections of Movement Distance and Type
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The Neural Basis of Recursion and Complex Syntactic Hierarchy
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In: BIOLINGUISTICS; Vol. 5 No. 1-2 (2011); 087-104 ; 1450-3417 (2011)
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Perisylvian Functional Connectivity during Processing of Sentential Negation
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Neural Control of Cross-language Asymmetry in the Bilingual Brain
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Neural Control of Cross-language Asymmetry in the Bilingual Brain
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Neural Control of Cross-language Asymmetry in the Bilingual Brain
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Segregating the core computational faculty of human language from working memory
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