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1
Domain Selectivity in the Parahippocampal Gyrus Is Predicted by the Same Structural Connectivity Patterns in Blind and Sighted Individuals
Wang, Xiaoying; He, Chenxi; Peelen, Marius V.. - : Society for Neuroscience, 2017
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2
Reading Without Speech Sounds: VWFA and its Connectivity in the Congenitally Deaf
Wang, Xiaosha; Caramazza, Alfonso; Peelen, Marius V.. - : Oxford University Press, 2015
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3
Privileged detection of conspecifics: Evidence from inversion effects during continuous flash suppression
In: Cognition. - Amsterdam [u.a] : Elsevier 125 (2012) 1, 64-79
OLC Linguistik
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4
Independent Representations of Verbs and Actions in Left Lateral Temporal Cortex
Peelen, Marius V.; Romagno, Domenica; Caramazza, Alfonso. - : MIT Press - Journals, 2012
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5
Eye contact facilitates awareness of faces during interocular suppression
In: Cognition. - Amsterdam [u.a] : Elsevier 119 (2011) 2, 307-311
OLC Linguistik
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6
Language-Invariant Verb Processing Regions in Spanish-English Bilinguals
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7
Language-Invariant Verb Processing Regions in Spanish-English Bilinguals
Abstract: Nouns and verbs are fundamental grammatical building blocks of all languages. Studies of brain-damaged patients and healthy individuals have demonstrated that verb processing can be dissociated from noun processing at a neuroanatomical level. In cases where bilingual patients have a noun or verb deficit, the deficit has been observed in both languages. This suggests that the noun-verb distinction may be based on neural components that are common across languages. Here we investigated the cortical organization of grammatical categories in healthy, early Spanish-English bilinguals using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in a morphophonological alternation task. Four regions showed greater activity for verbs than for nouns in both languages: left posterior middle temporal gyrus (LMTG), left middle frontal gyrus (LMFG), pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA), and right middle occipital gyrus (RMOG); no regions showed greater activation for nouns. Multi-voxel pattern analysis within verb-specific regions showed indistinguishable activity patterns for English and Spanish, indicating language-invariant bilingual processing. In LMTG and LMFG, patterns were more similar within than across grammatical category, both within and across languages, indicating language-invariant grammatical class information. These results suggest that the neural substrates underlying verb-specific processing are largely independent of language in bilinguals, both at the macroscopic neuroanatomical level and at the level of voxel activity patterns.
Keyword: Article
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3103832
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21515387
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.04.021
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