4.7 Article

Effects of Phonological Consistency and Semantic Radical Combinability on N170 and P200 in the Reading of Chinese Phonograms

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Linguistics

N170 reflects visual familiarity and automatic sublexical phonological access in L2 written word processing

Yen Na Yum et al.

Summary: Literature has conflicting reports on whether N170 represents orthographic and/or phonological processing, and if these effects are influenced by script and language expertise. Different groups showed variations in left-lateralized and bilateral N170 responses, with irregular characters causing increased N170 amplitudes compared to regular characters.

BILINGUALISM-LANGUAGE AND COGNITION (2021)

Article Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology

Early MEG markers for reading Chinese phonograms: Evidence from radical combinability and consistency effects

Chun-Hsien Hsu et al.

BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2014)

Article Neurosciences

MEG masked priming evidence for form-based decomposition of irregular verbs

Joseph Fruchter et al.

FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE (2013)

Article Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology

The neural basis of obligatory decomposition of suffixed words

Gwyneth Lewis et al.

BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2011)

Review Behavioral Sciences

The unique role of the visual word form area in reading

Stanislas Dehaene et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2011)

Article Neurosciences

Evidence for Early Morphological Decomposition in Visual Word Recognition

Olla Solomyak et al.

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2010)

Article Linguistics

A visual M170 effect of morphological complexity

Eytan Zweig et al.

LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES (2009)

Review Neurosciences

A cortical network for semantics: (de)constructing the N400

Ellen F. Lau et al.

NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE (2008)

Review Psychology

SD-squared: On the association between semantic dementia and surface dyslexia

Anna M. Woollams et al.

PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW (2007)

Article Linguistics

Analysis of a Chinese phonetic compound database: Implications for orthographic processing

Janet Hui-wen Hsiao et al.

JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH (2006)

Letter Behavioral Sciences

A developmental perspective on the neural code for written words

U Goswami et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2006)

Article Neurosciences

Early event-related potential effects of syllabic processing during visual word recognition

M Carreiras et al.

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2005)

Article Neurosciences

Relation between brain activation and lexical performance

JR Booth et al.

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING (2003)

Article Psychology, Biological

The visual N1 component as an index of a discrimination process

EK Vogel et al.

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2000)