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Hits 1 – 11 of 11

1
Effects of continuous theta burst stimulation over the left DLPFC on mother tongue and second language production in late bilinguals: a behavioral and ERP study
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2
Brain structural evidence for a frontal pole specialization in glossolalia
In: IBRO Rep (2020)
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3
Orthographic Visualisation Induced Brain Activations in a Chronic Poststroke Global Aphasia with Dissociation between Oral and Written Expression
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4
Second-language proficiency modulates the brain language control network in bilingual translators: An event-related fMRI study
Mouthon, Michael; Khateb, Asaid; Lazeyras, François. - : Cambridge University Press, 2019
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5
On the Origin of the N400 Effects: An ERP Waveform and Source Localization Analysis in Three Matching Tasks
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6
The role of the cognitive control system in recovery from bilingual aphasia: a multiple single-case fMRI study
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7
The Role of the Cognitive Control System in Recovery from Bilingual Aphasia: A Multiple Single-Case fMRI Study
Radman, Narges; Mouthon, Michael; Di Pietro, Marie. - : Hindawi Publishing Corporation, 2016
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8
Semantic relatedness and first-second language effects in the bilingual brain: a brain mapping study
Abstract: Behavioural studies investigating word processing in bilinguals generally report faster response times (RTs) for first (L1) than for second (L2) language words. To examine the locus of this language effect, this study used behavioural data and event-related potentials (ERPs) collected from bilinguals while performing a semantic categorisation task on visual word pairs. RTs revealed both language and semantic relatedness effects. Spatio-temporal analysis of ERP map series showed that the semantic effect was explained by a condition-specific map segment occurring during the N400 component. The language effect was primarily explained by a map segment that started at ~170 ms and covered the period of the P2 component, that was longer in L2 than in L1 and whose duration correlated with RTs. Source localisation showed that this early segment involved the bilateral occipito-temporal regions including the fusiform area. These findings indicate that ERPs differentiated L1 and L2 during early word recognition steps.
Keyword: 1203 Language and Linguistics; 3304 Education; 3310 Linguistics and Language; Bilinguals; Brain mapping; Distributed source localisation; ERP map series; Event-related potentials; Semantic processing; Temporal segmentation
URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:651481
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9
Cognitive control of language production in bilinguals involves a partly independent process within the domain-general cognitive control network: evidence from task-switching and electrical brain activity
In: Brain & language. - Orlando, Fla. [u.a.] : Elsevier 122 (2012) 1, 55-63
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OLC Linguistik
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10
On the Origin of the N400 Effects: An ERP Waveform and Source Localization Analysis in Three Matching Tasks
In: ISSN: 0896-0267 ; Brain Topography, Vol. 23, No 3 (2010) pp. 311-320 (2010)
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11
On the origin of the N400 effects: An ERP waveform and source localization analysis in three matching tasks
Khateb, Asaid; Pegna, Alan J.; Landis, Theodor. - : Springer Nature, 2010
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