Special Issue: Original ArticleAbstract Grammatical Processing of Nouns and Verbs in Broca's Area: Evidence from FMRI
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Neural Processing of Morphology During Reading in Children
2022, NeuroscienceCitation Excerpt :Neuroimaging studies in adults implicate both left frontal and bilateral temporal areas in morphological processing across languages. Left IFG, including pars opercularis and pars triangularis, have been implicated in morphological decomposition of inflected (Beretta et al., 2003; Tyler et al., 2005; Sahin et al., 2006; Bozic et al., 2013b; Pliatsikas et al., 2014; Nevat et al., 2017) and derived words (Marangolo et al., 2006; Bozic et al., 2007) in different modalities and languages. MEG studies suggest that morphological effects in these frontal regions represent late morpho-phonological segmentation processes at around 350–495 ms. following the visual presentation of the word (Whiting et al., 2014; Cavalli et al., 2016).
Grammar in the brain: Two grammar subsystems and two agrammatic types of aphasia
2021, Journal of Neurolinguistics
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