Pages that link to "Q84290186"
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The following pages link to Kara D Federmeier (Q84290186):
Displaying 50 items.
- Timed picture naming in seven languages (Q24633229) (← links)
- It's All in the Family: Brain Asymmetry and Syntactic Processing of Word Class (Q28646936) (← links)
- The association between aerobic fitness and language processing in children: implications for academic achievement. (Q30410125) (← links)
- Thirty years and counting: finding meaning in the N400 component of the event-related brain potential (ERP). (Q30436872) (← links)
- FN400 potentials are functionally identical to N400 potentials and reflect semantic processing during recognition testing (Q30469157) (← links)
- Remembering and Voting: Theory and Evidence from Amnesic Patients (Q30571221) (← links)
- Event-related potential evidence suggesting voters remember political events that never happened. (Q30575745) (← links)
- Minding the body (Q32074572) (← links)
- 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 (Q33273088) (← links)
- Finding the right word: hemispheric asymmetries in the use of sentence context information (Q33292040) (← links)
- Summing it up: semantic activation processes in the two hemispheres as revealed by event-related potentials (Q33357151) (← links)
- Electrophysiology of object naming in primary progressive aphasia (Q33605426) (← links)
- Never Seem to Find the Time: Evaluating the Physiological Time Course of Visual Word Recognition with Regression Analysis of Single Item ERPs. (Q33768675) (← links)
- Verbal working memory predicts co-speech gesture: evidence from individual differences (Q33788717) (← links)
- Automatic and controlled aspects of lexical associative processing in the two cerebral hemispheres (Q34009086) (← links)
- Event-related potentials reveal the effects of aging on meaning selection and revision (Q34009249) (← links)
- Language of the aging brain: Event-related potential studies of comprehension in older adults. (Q34094895) (← links)
- The N400 as a snapshot of interactive processing: Evidence from regression analyses of orthographic neighbor and lexical associate effects (Q34204206) (← links)
- The potato chip really does look like Elvis! Neural hallmarks of conceptual processing associated with finding novel shapes subjectively meaningful (Q34232162) (← links)
- Age-related and individual differences in the use of prediction during language comprehension. (Q34288715) (← links)
- Hemispheric differences in the recruitment of semantic processing mechanisms (Q34339029) (← links)
- Frequency and regularity effects in reading are task dependent: Evidence from ERPs (Q34569964) (← links)
- Hippocampal brain-network coordination during volitional exploratory behavior enhances learning (Q34674218) (← links)
- Differential age effects on lexical ambiguity resolution mechanisms (Q35022291) (← links)
- Spontaneous revisitation during visual exploration as a link among strategic behavior, learning, and the hippocampus (Q35149478) (← links)
- Hemispheric differences in orthographic and semantic processing as revealed by event-related potentials (Q35297189) (← links)
- Ambiguity's aftermath: how age differences in resolving lexical ambiguity affect subsequent comprehension (Q35842740) (← links)
- Won't get fooled again: An event-related potential study of task and repetition effects on the semantic processing of items without semantics. (Q35893929) (← links)
- The N400 reveals how personal semantics is processed: Insights into the nature and organization of self-knowledge (Q35908617) (← links)
- Subsequent to suppression: Downstream comprehension consequences of noun/verb ambiguity in natural reading (Q36042608) (← links)
- A "concrete view" of aging: event related potentials reveal age-related changes in basic integrative processes in language (Q36119676) (← links)
- Revisiting the incremental effects of context on word processing: Evidence from single-word event-related brain potentials. (Q36132852) (← links)
- A new on-line resource for psycholinguistic studies (Q36247008) (← links)
- Dispreferred adjective orders elicit brain responses associated with lexico-semantic rather than syntactic processing. (Q36253203) (← links)
- Getting ahead of yourself: Parafoveal word expectancy modulates the N400 during sentence reading. (Q36253564) (← links)
- So that's what you meant! Event-related potentials reveal multiple aspects of context use during construction of message-level meaning (Q36275935) (← links)
- The language of arithmetic across the hemispheres: An event-related potential investigation. (Q36290801) (← links)
- The effects of context, meaning frequency, and associative strength on semantic selection: distinct contributions from each cerebral hemisphere (Q36397844) (← links)
- Two sides of meaning: the scalp-recorded n400 reflects distinct contributions from the cerebral hemispheres (Q36785569) (← links)
- Time for prediction? The effect of presentation rate on predictive sentence comprehension during word-by-word reading. (Q36800617) (← links)
- Thinking ahead: the role and roots of prediction in language comprehension (Q36830252) (← links)
- To predict or not to predict: age-related differences in the use of sentential context (Q36937686) (← links)
- The divided visual world paradigm: eye tracking reveals hemispheric asymmetries in lexical ambiguity resolution (Q37071938) (← links)
- Hemispheric asymmetries in the time course of recognition memory (Q37193402) (← links)
- Event-related potentials reveal age differences in the encoding and recognition of scenes (Q37193562) (← links)
- Left and right memory revisited: electrophysiological investigations of hemispheric asymmetries at retrieval (Q37193785) (← links)
- See what I mean? An ERP study of the effect of background knowledge on novel object processing (Q37193887) (← links)
- Imaginative Language: What Event-Related Potentials have Revealed about the Nature and Source of Concreteness Effects (Q37194040) (← links)
- Better the DVL you know: acronyms reveal the contribution of familiarity to single-word reading (Q37215870) (← links)
- Multiple priming of lexically ambiguous and unambiguous targets in the cerebral hemispheres: the coarse coding hypothesis revisited (Q37221298) (← links)