Brain Research in Language addresses important neurological issues involved in reading. The reading process is a highly composite cognitive task, which relies on brain systems that were originally devoted to other functions. The majority of studies in this area have used behavioral methodologies. Th
Brain Research in Language
β Scribed by Zvia Breznitz, Lilach Lebovitz
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 279
- Series
- Literacy Studies 1
- Edition
- 1st
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Brain Research in Language addresses important neurological issues involved in reading. The reading process is a highly composite cognitive task, which relies on brain systems that were originally devoted to other functions. The majority of studies in this area have implemented behavioral methodologies, which provide information concerning the entire cognitive sequence at the conclusion of processing only, in the readerβs output. However, these measures cannot specify all of the covert component operations that contribute to reading, nor can they determine the relative processing times required by the individual stages. Furthermore, they cannot determine which processes occur serially, which occur in parallel and which overlap in time (Brandeis & Lehmann, 1994; Johnson, 1995). Recent advancements in the field of neuroscience and cognitive development, however, have added a new dimension with regard to the research into the universal and domain specific aspects of reading with the advent of innovative neurophysiological measurement techniques. The most common are electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). These two methods provide researchers with the opportunity to examine, in-depth, the neural correlates of the reading processing with precise temporal and spatial resolutions, respectively. This book presents data obtained from various studies employing behavioral, electrophysiological and imaging methodologies in different languages focusing on the regular reading process and the dyslexic population.
Educators and researchers within neuroscience, literacy, and special education will benefit from Brain Research in Language.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Neurobiological Correlates of Dyslexia....Pages 7-49
Event-Related Potentials (ERPS) in the Study of Dyslexia....Pages 51-92
Auditory P2 is Reduced in 5 Month old Infants From Dyslexic Families....Pages 93-110
Electrophysiological Functional Imaging of Auditory Processing in Humans....Pages 111-124
Overlapping Tasks Methodology as a Tool for Investigating Language Perception....Pages 125-152
A Sampler of Event-Related Brain Potential (ERP) Analyses of Language Processing....Pages 153-186
Processing the Grammatical function of Words in Sentence Reading....Pages 187-203
Timing the Metaphoric Brain....Pages 205-223
EEG Correlates of Hemispheric Word Recognition....Pages 225-245
Brain Mapping of Language Using High Frequency Gamma Oscillations in the Electrocorticography....Pages 247-273
Back Matter....Pages 275-277
β¦ Subjects
Language Education; Pedagogic Psychology; Cognitive Psychology
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