
- An MEG Study of Silent Meaning Liina Pylkkanen and Brian McElree
- Results: Peak dipole amplitudes were larger
- The Interpretation of Concealed Questions: MEG and Eye-tracking Data Jesse Harris1, Liina Pylkknen1,2, Brian McElree1, and Steven Frisson3
- Coercion Control Spatial filter analysis reveals
- The Representation of Polysemy: MEG Evidence Liina Pylkknen (1, 2), Rodolfo Llins (3), Gregory Murphy (1)
- Processing events: Behavioral and neuromagnetic correlates of Aspectual Coercion Jonathan Brennan a,*, Liina Pylkknen a,b
- The cost of question concealment: Eye-tracking and MEG evidence Jesse Harris a,b
- Sentence Processing in MEG The time-course and spatial distribution of brain activity associated with sentence
- Running Head: Shifting senses in lexical semantic development Shifting senses in lexical semantic development
- |Research Focus Tracking the time course of word recognition with
- To appear in M. Traxler & M.A. Gernsbacher (eds.), Handbook of Psycholinguistics (2nd Ed). NY: Elsevier. The syntax-semantic interface: On-line composition of sentence meaning
- Brief article Neural correlates of the effects of morphological
- ...was in the high tree ...was highly tree
- Language in Wonderland: Linguistic processing during natural story listening Jonathan Brennan1, Yuval Nir4, Uri Hasson3, Rafael Malach4, David Heeger2,3 and Liina Pylkknen1,2
- The Timecourse of Morphological Processing: An MEG Study Eytan Zweig and Liina Pylkknen
- The roles of the right hemisphere and the anterior midline field in semantic processing: MEG studies Liina Pylkknen1,2,, Gregory Murphy1, Brian McElree1, Jesse Harris1, Jasmine Francis3, Andrea Martin1 & Rodolfo Llins3
- 53 Copyright 2006 Psychonomic Society, Inc. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
- Brain and Language 81, 666678 (2002) doi:10.1006/brln.2001.2555, available online at http://www.idealibrary.com on
- A neural response sensitive to repetition and phonotactic probability: MEG investigations of lexical access