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Spreckelmeyer, Katja N.; Kutas, Marta; Urbach, Thomas; Altenmuller, Eckart; Munte, Thomas F. – Brain and Cognition, 2009
The voice is a marker of a person's identity which allows individual recognition even if the person is not in sight. Listening to a voice also affords inferences about the speaker's emotional state. Both these types of personal information are encoded in characteristic acoustic feature patterns analyzed within the auditory cortex. In the present…
Descriptors: Inferences, Cognitive Processes, Neurological Organization, Emotional Response
Moritz, Steffen; Jelinek, Lena; Hottenrott, Birgit; Klinge, Ruth; Randjbar, Sarah – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Recent neuroimaging studies have consistently ascribed the orbito-frontal cortex (OFC) a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Cognitive tests presumed sensitive to this region, such as the Object Alternation Task (OAT), are considered important tools to verify this assumption and to investigate the impact of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Tests, Pathology, Patients, Depression (Psychology)
Danilova, M. V.; Mollon, J. D. – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Both classical and recent reports suggest a right-hemisphere superiority for color discrimination. Testing highly-trained normal subjects and taking care to eliminate asymmetries from the testing situation, we found no significant differences between left and right hemifields or between upper and lower hemifields. This was the case for both of the…
Descriptors: Testing, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Visual Discrimination, Visual Stimuli
Torkildsen, Janne von Koss; Hansen, Hanna Friis; Svangstu, Janne Mari; Smith, Lars; Simonsen, Hanne Gram; Moen, Inger; Lindgren, Magnus – Brain and Language, 2009
The present study investigated the brain mechanisms involved during young children's receptive familiarization with new words, and whether the dynamics of these mechanisms are related to the child's productive vocabulary size. To this end, we recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) from 20-month-old children in a pseudoword repetition task.…
Descriptors: Brain, Vocabulary Development, Receptive Language, Infants
Sabourin, Laura – Second Language Research, 2009
Neuroimaging techniques are becoming not only more and more sophisticated but are also coming to be increasingly accessible to researchers. One thing that one should take note of is the potential of neuroimaging research within second language acquisition (SLA) to contribute to issues pertaining to the plasticity of the adult brain and to general…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Neurological Organization, Learning Processes, Brain
Parks, Lauren K.; Hill, Dina E.; Thoma, Robert J.; Euler, Matthew J.; Lewine, Jeffrey D.; Yeo, Ronald A. – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2009
Although many studies have compared the brains of normal controls and individuals with autism, especially older, higher-functioning individuals with autism, little is known of the neural correlates of the vast clinical heterogeneity characteristic of the disorder. In this study, we used voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to examine gray matter…
Descriptors: Autism, Children, Severity (of Disability), Communication Skills
Goldfarb, Robert; Bekker, Natalie – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2009
This study investigated noun-verb retrieval patterns of 30 adults with chronic undifferentiated schizophrenia and 67 typical adults, to determine if schizophrenia affected nouns (associated with temporal lobe function) differently from verbs (associated with frontal lobe function). Stimuli were homophonic homographic homonyms, balanced according…
Descriptors: Sentences, Verbs, Nouns, Schizophrenia
Meguerditchian, Adrien; Vauclair, Jacques – Brain and Language, 2009
Gestural communication is a modality considered in the literature as a candidate for determining the ancestral prerequisites of the emergence of human language. As reported in captive chimpanzees and human children, a study in captive baboons revealed that a communicative gesture elicits stronger degree of right-hand bias than non-communicative…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Handedness, Nonverbal Communication, Specialization
Rapopart, Judith; Chavez, Alex; Greenstein, Deanna; Addington, Anjene; Gogtay, Nitin – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2009
Clinical, demographic, and brain development data on childhood-onset schizophrenia (COS) and family, imaging and genetic data from studies of autism were reviewed. It is found that COS is preceded by and comorbid with autism/pervasive developmental disorder and schizophrenia in 30 to 50 percent of cases based on two large studies.
Descriptors: Schizophrenia, Autism, Children, Brain
Light, Sharee N.; Coan, James A.; Frye, Corrina; Goldsmith, H. Hill; Davidson, Richard J. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Individual variation in the experience and expression of pleasure may relate to differential patterns of lateral frontal activity. Brain electrical measures have been used to study the asymmetric involvement of lateral frontal cortex in positive emotion, but the excellent time resolution of these measures has not been used to capture…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Children, Diagnostic Tests, Emotional Response
Tlauka, Michael; Clark, C. Richard; Liu, Ping; Conway, Marie – Brain and Cognition, 2009
This study examined the temporal characteristics of event-related brain electrical activity associated with the processing of spatial memories derived from linguistic and tactile information. Participants learned a map by (1) reading a text description of the map, (2) touching a wooden topological representation of the map (hidden from view), or…
Descriptors: Memory, Brain, Spatial Ability, Infants
Piquard, Ambre; Lacomblez, Lucette; Derouesne, Christian; Sieroff, Eric – Brain and Cognition, 2009
We studied the role of the frontal lobes in orienting spatial attention and inhibiting attentional capture by goal-irrelevant stimuli, using a spatial cueing method in patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Two blocks of trials were presented, one with non-predictive cues and the other with counter-predictive cues. FTD patients showed a…
Descriptors: Cues, Dementia, Inhibition, Patients
Theodoridou, Zoe D.; Triarhou, Lazaros C. – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2009
This article focuses on two early attempts at bridging neuroscience and education, made by Henry Herbert Donaldson (1857-1938), a neurologist, and Reuben Post Halleck (1859-1936), an educator. Their works, respectively entitled "The Growth of the Brain: A Study of the Nervous System in Relation to Education" (1895) and "The Education of the…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Brain, Cognitive Science, Neurology
Hodapp, Maike; Vry, Julia; Mall, Volker; Faist, Michael – Brain, 2009
In healthy children, short latency leg muscle reflexes are profoundly modulated throughout the step cycle in a functionally meaningful way and contribute to the electromyographic (EMG) pattern observed during gait. With maturation of the corticospinal tract, the reflex amplitudes are depressed via supraspinal inhibitory mechanisms. In the soleus…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Cerebral Palsy, Human Body, Training
Sander, T.; Sprenger, A.; Neumann, G.; Machner, B.; Gottschalk, S.; Rambold, H.; Helmchen, C. – Brain, 2009
The cerebellum is part of the cortico-ponto-cerebellar circuit for conjugate eye movements. Recent animal data suggest an additional role of the cerebellum for the control of binocular alignment and disconjugate, i.e. vergence eye movements. The latter is separated into two different components: fast vergence (to step targets) and slow vergence…
Descriptors: Animals, Eye Movements, Patients, Human Body

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