4.7 Article

Electrophysiological Correlates of Character Transposition in the Left and Right Visual Fields

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Behavioral Sciences

Hemispheric asymmetries in processing numerical meaning in arithmetic

Selim Jang et al.

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2020)

Article Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology

The processing of homographic morphemes in Chinese: an ERP study

Yan Wu et al.

LANGUAGE COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE (2017)

Article Psychology

Right visual-field advantage in the attentional blink: Asymmetry in attentional gating across time and space

Dafna Bergerbest et al.

ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS (2017)

Article Psychology, Biological

FN400 and LPC memory effects for concrete and abstract words

Pawel Strozak et al.

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2016)

Review Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology

Do morphemes matter when reading compound words with transposed letters? Evidence from eye-tracking and event-related potentials

Mallory C. Stites et al.

LANGUAGE COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE (2016)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Character Decomposition and Transposition Processes in Chinese Compound Words Modulates Attentional Blink

Hongwen Cao et al.

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2016)

Article Psychology

Character Order Processing in Chinese Reading

Junjuan Gu et al.

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE (2015)

Article Neurosciences

Semantic processing during morphological priming: An ERP study

Elisabeth Beyersmann et al.

BRAIN RESEARCH (2014)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Two-Character Chinese Compound Word Processing in Chinese Children With and Without Dyslexia: ERP Evidence

Xiuhong Tong et al.

DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY (2014)

Article Psychology

On the Costs of Lag-1 Sparing

Paul E. Dux et al.

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE (2014)

Article Linguistics

Pre-lexical phonological processing in reading Chinese characters: An ERP study

Lin Zhou et al.

JOURNAL OF NEUROLINGUISTICS (2014)

Article Behavioral Sciences

ERPs and morphological processing: the N400 and semantic composition

Donna Coch et al.

COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE (2013)

Article Behavioral Sciences

An ERP investigation of visual word recognition in syllabary scripts

Kana Okano et al.

COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE (2013)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Two sides of meaning: the scalp-recorded N400 reflects distinct contributions from the cerebral hemispheres

Edward W. Wlotko et al.

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2013)

Article Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology

Early, equivalent ERP masked priming effects for regular and irregular morphology

Joanna Morris et al.

BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2012)

Article Neurosciences

P200 can be modulated by orthography alone in reading Chinese words

Lingyue Kong et al.

NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS (2012)

Article Psychology, Biological

Parallel processing of whole words and morphemes in visual word recognition

Elisabeth Beyersmann et al.

QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (2012)

Article Neurosciences

Reversibility in Chinese word formation influences target identification

Chen Bai et al.

NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS (2011)

Article Psychology, Biological

What do fully visible primes and brain potentials reveal about morphological decomposition?

Aureliu Lavric et al.

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2011)

Article Neurosciences

P200 and phonological processing in Chinese word recognition

Lingyue Kong et al.

NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS (2010)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

SUBTLEX-CH: Chinese Word and Character Frequencies Based on Film Subtitles

Qing Cai et al.

PLOS ONE (2010)

Article Psychology

The Spatial Coding Model of Visual Word Identification

Cohn J. Davis

PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW (2010)

Article Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology

A lexical basis for N400 context effects: Evidence from MEG

Ellen Lau et al.

BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2009)

Article Neurosciences

N250 effects for letter transpositions depend on lexicality: 'casual' or 'causal'?

Jon Andoni Dunabeitia et al.

NEUROREPORT (2009)

Article Language & Linguistics

Watching the Word Go by: On the Time-course of Component Processes in Visual Word Recognition

Jonathan Grainger et al.

LANGUAGE AND LINGUISTICS COMPASS (2009)

Review Linguistics

Cracking the orthographic code: An introduction

Jonathan Grainger

LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES (2008)

Article Language & Linguistics

What's 'Right' in Language Comprehension: Event-Related Potentials Reveal Right Hemisphere Language Capabilities

Kara D. Federmeier et al.

LANGUAGE AND LINGUISTICS COMPASS (2008)

Article Neurosciences

Neural correlates of morphological decomposition during visual word recognition

Brian T. Gold et al.

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2007)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Finding the right word: Hemispheric asymmetries in the use of sentence context information

Edward W. Wlotko et al.

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2007)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Raeding wrods with jubmled lettres - There is a cost

K Rayner et al.

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2006)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Bilateral brain processes for comprehending natural language

M Jung-Beeman

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2005)

Article Psychology

Lag-1 sparing in the attentional blink:: Benefits and costs of integrating two events into a single episode

B Hommel et al.

QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY SECTION A-HUMAN EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (2005)

Article Psychology

Right hemisphere sensitivity to word- and sentence-level context: Evidence from event-related brain potentials

S Coulson et al.

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION (2005)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Visual-field asymmetry in dual-stream RSVP

A Hollander et al.

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2005)

Article Neurosciences

Brain responses to segmentally and tonally induced semantic violations in Cantonese

A Schirmer et al.

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2005)

Article Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology

Hemispheric asymmetries in the split-fovea model of semantic processing

P Monaghan et al.

BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2004)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Does the huamn mnid raed wrods as a wlohe?

J Grainger et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2004)

Article Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology

Perception of words and non-words in the upper and lower visual fields

IT Darker et al.

BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2004)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Why word length only matters in the left visual field

C Whitney et al.

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2004)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Priming by natural category membership in the left and right cerebral hemispheres

J Grose-Fifer et al.

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2004)

Review Behavioral Sciences

Event-related potential studies of attention

SJ Luck et al.

TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2000)

Review Psychology, Experimental

Brain potentials of recollection and familiarity

T Curran

MEMORY & COGNITION (2000)