Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.Processing Ambiguous Morphemes in Chinese Compound Word Recognition: Behavioral and ERP Evidence
Yan Wu et al.
NEUROSCIENCE (2020)
Hemispheric asymmetries in processing numerical meaning in arithmetic
Selim Jang et al.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2020)
Morphological processing in the brain: The good (inflection), the bad (derivation) and the ugly (compounding)
Alina Leminen et al.
CORTEX (2019)
Event-related potentials during Chinese single-character and two-character word reading in children
Jason Chor Ming Lo et al.
BRAIN AND COGNITION (2019)
Semantic Radical Activation in Chinese Phonogram Recognition: Evidence from Event-Related Potential Recording
Yun Zou et al.
NEUROSCIENCE (2019)
The processing of homographic morphemes in Chinese: an ERP study
Yan Wu et al.
LANGUAGE COGNITION AND NEUROSCIENCE (2017)
Right visual-field advantage in the attentional blink: Asymmetry in attentional gating across time and space
Dafna Bergerbest et al.
ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS (2017)
A right hemisphere advantage at early cortical stages of processing alphanumeric stimuli. Evidence from electrophysiology
Dariusz Asanowicz et al.
BRAIN AND COGNITION (2017)
Hemispheric asymmetry in event knowledge activation during incremental language comprehension: A visual half-field ERP study
Ross Metusalem et al.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2016)
FN400 and LPC memory effects for concrete and abstract words
Pawel Strozak et al.
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2016)
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)
The Processing of Visual and Phonological Configurations of Chinese One- and Two-Character Words in a Priming Task of Semantic Categorization
Bosen Ma et al.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2016)
Stability of right visual field advantage in an international lateralized lexical decision task irrespective of participants' sex, handedness or bilingualism
Julie Willemin et al.
LATERALITY (2016)
Character Decomposition and Transposition of Chinese Compound Words in the Right and Left Visual Fields
Hong-Wen Cao et al.
I-PERCEPTION (2016)
Character Decomposition and Transposition Processes in Chinese Compound Words Modulates Attentional Blink
Hongwen Cao et al.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2016)
Character Order Processing in Chinese Reading
Junjuan Gu et al.
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE (2015)
Semantic processing during morphological priming: An ERP study
Elisabeth Beyersmann et al.
BRAIN RESEARCH (2014)
Two-Character Chinese Compound Word Processing in Chinese Children With and Without Dyslexia: ERP Evidence
Xiuhong Tong et al.
DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY (2014)
On the Costs of Lag-1 Sparing
Paul E. Dux et al.
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE (2014)
Pre-lexical phonological processing in reading Chinese characters: An ERP study
Lin Zhou et al.
JOURNAL OF NEUROLINGUISTICS (2014)
Masked priming and ERPs dissociate maturation of orthographic and semantic components of visual word recognition in children
Marianna D. Eddy et al.
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2014)
Sensitivity to the positional information of morphemes inside Chinese compound words and its relationship with word reading
Duo Liu et al.
READING AND WRITING (2014)
ERPs and morphological processing: the N400 and semantic composition
Donna Coch et al.
COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE (2013)
An ERP investigation of visual word recognition in syllabary scripts
Kana Okano et al.
COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE (2013)
Two sides of meaning: the scalp-recorded N400 reflects distinct contributions from the cerebral hemispheres
Edward W. Wlotko et al.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2013)
Early, equivalent ERP masked priming effects for regular and irregular morphology
Joanna Morris et al.
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2012)
P200 can be modulated by orthography alone in reading Chinese words
Lingyue Kong et al.
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS (2012)
Parallel processing of whole words and morphemes in visual word recognition
Elisabeth Beyersmann et al.
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (2012)
Thirty Years and Counting: Finding Meaning in the N400 Component of the Event-Related Brain Potential (ERP)
Marta Kutas et al.
ANNUAL REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY, VOL 62 (2011)
Monitoring in language perception: Electrophysiological and hemodynamic responses to spelling violations
Nan van de Meerendonk et al.
NEUROIMAGE (2011)
Reversibility in Chinese word formation influences target identification
Chen Bai et al.
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS (2011)
What do fully visible primes and brain potentials reveal about morphological decomposition?
Aureliu Lavric et al.
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2011)
Parafoveal perception during sentence reading? An ERP paradigm using rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) with flankers
Horacio A. Barber et al.
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2011)
P200 and phonological processing in Chinese word recognition
Lingyue Kong et al.
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS (2010)
SUBTLEX-CH: Chinese Word and Character Frequencies Based on Film Subtitles
Qing Cai et al.
PLOS ONE (2010)
The Spatial Coding Model of Visual Word Identification
Cohn J. Davis
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW (2010)
Holistic versus analytic processing: Evidence for a different approach to processing of Chinese at the word and character levels in Chinese children
Phil D. Liu et al.
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY (2010)
A lexical basis for N400 context effects: Evidence from MEG
Ellen Lau et al.
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2009)
N250 effects for letter transpositions depend on lexicality: 'casual' or 'causal'?
Jon Andoni Dunabeitia et al.
NEUROREPORT (2009)
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)
Cerebral Lateralization of Frontal Lobe Language Processes and Lateralization of the Posterior Visual Word Processing System
Qing Cai et al.
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2008)
Neural mechanisms underlying the processing of Chinese and English words in a word generation task: An event-related potential study
Jiang Qiu et al.
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY (2008)
Cracking the orthographic code: An introduction
Jonathan Grainger
LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES (2008)
What's 'Right' in Language Comprehension: Event-Related Potentials Reveal Right Hemisphere Language Capabilities
Kara D. Federmeier et al.
LANGUAGE AND LINGUISTICS COMPASS (2008)
Neural correlates of morphological decomposition during visual word recognition
Brian T. Gold et al.
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2007)
ERP correlates of transposed-letter similarity effects: Are consonants processed differently from vowels?
Manuel Carreiras et al.
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS (2007)
Hemispheric differences in the time-course of semantic priming processes:: Evidence from event-related potentials (ERPs)
Sarah Bouaffre et al.
BRAIN AND COGNITION (2007)
Finding the right word: Hemispheric asymmetries in the use of sentence context information
Edward W. Wlotko et al.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2007)
Neural correlates of foveal splitting in reading: Evidence from an ERP study of Chinese character recognition
Janet Hui-wen Hsiao et al.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2007)
The memory that's right and the memory that's left: Event-related potentials reveal hemispheric asymmetries in the encoding and retention of verbal information
Karen M. Evans et al.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2007)
Raeding wrods with jubmled lettres - There is a cost
K Rayner et al.
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE (2006)
Comparison of spatiotemporal cortical activation pattern during visual perception of Korean, English, Chinese words: An event-related potential study
KH Kim et al.
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS (2006)
Bilateral brain processes for comprehending natural language
M Jung-Beeman
TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2005)
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)
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)
Visual-field asymmetry in dual-stream RSVP
A Hollander et al.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2005)
Brain responses to segmentally and tonally induced semantic violations in Cantonese
A Schirmer et al.
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2005)
Hemispheric asymmetries in the split-fovea model of semantic processing
P Monaghan et al.
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2004)
The importance of interhemispheric transfer for foveal vision: A factor that has been overlooked in theories of visual word recognition and object perception
M Brysbaert
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2004)
Does the huamn mnid raed wrods as a wlohe?
J Grainger et al.
TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2004)
Evidence for a new conceptualization of semantic representation in the left and right cerebral hemispheres
D Deacon et al.
CORTEX (2004)
Perception of words and non-words in the upper and lower visual fields
IT Darker et al.
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE (2004)
Why word length only matters in the left visual field
C Whitney et al.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2004)
Priming by natural category membership in the left and right cerebral hemispheres
J Grose-Fifer et al.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2004)
Using event-related potentials to examine hemispheric differences in semantic processing
RA Atchley et al.
BRAIN AND COGNITION (2003)
How the brain encodes the order of letters in a printed word: The SERIOL model and selective literature review
C Whitney
PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW (2001)
Event-related potential studies of attention
SJ Luck et al.
TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES (2000)
Brain potentials of recollection and familiarity
T Curran
MEMORY & COGNITION (2000)