The recognition potential and repetition effects.

scientific article published on February 2002

The recognition potential and repetition effects. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1016/S0167-8760(01)00171-4
P698PubMed publication ID11809518

P50authorLuis CarretiéQ63977026
Manuel Martín-LoechesQ48828624
José A HinojosaQ50749415
Miguel A. PozoQ50749424
P2093author name stringFrancisco Muñoz
Carlos Fernández-Frías
Pilar Casado
P2860cites workEstablishing a time-line of word recognition: evidence from eye movements and event-related potentials.Q52038242
Lexical contribution to nonword-repetition effects: evidence from event-related potentials.Q52128186
Recognition potential latency and word image degradation.Q52205037
Recognition potential: sensitivity to visual field stimulatedQ52390386
Auditory and visual word processing studied with fMRIQ60545959
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The recognition potential and conscious awarenessQ71103229
The recognition potential and word primingQ72999404
The recognition potential, word difficulty, and individual reading ability: on using event-related potentials to study perceptionQ73622102
The recognition potential and reversed lettersQ73678694
Word and nonword repetition within- and across-modality: an event-related potential studyQ87284101
The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventoryQ26778476
Electrophysiological evidence of a semantic system commonly accessed by animals and tools categoriesQ38438049
Functional differences in the semantic processing of concrete and abstract wordsQ38439431
An early electrophysiological sign of semantic processing in basal extrastriate areasQ38440689
Common basal extrastriate areas for the semantic processing of words and pictures.Q38446307
The recognition potential: An ERP index of lexical access.Q38447197
The neural substrate of picture namingQ38448369
The neural circuitry involved in the reading of German words and pseudowords: A PET studyQ38448376
An electrophysiological analysis of animacy effects in the processing of object relative sentencesQ38448576
The recognition potential and the word frequency effect at a high rate of word presentationQ38449029
A neural basis for category and modality specificity of semantic knowledgeQ38449156
Semantic, repetition and rime priming between spoken words: behavioral and electrophysiological evidenceQ38452574
A multimodal language region in the ventral visual pathwayQ38452704
Knowledge inhibition and N400: a study with words that look like common wordsQ38453576
Neural processing of words in the human extrastriate visual cortexQ38454023
Human brain language areas identified by functional magnetic resonance imaging.Q38458187
The N400 as a function of the level of processingQ38463483
Categories of knowledge. Further fractionations and an attempted integrationQ38488220
Scalp distributions of event-related potentials: an ambiguity associated with analysis of variance modelsQ43934288
Scalp current density fields: concept and propertiesQ48097899
Statistical issues concerning computerized analysis of brainwave topographyQ48349291
Rapid stream stimulation and the recognition potentialQ48464146
Dissociation of the neural correlates of implicit and explicit memoryQ48483404
Functional imaging and localization of electromagnetic brain activityQ48577728
ERP repetition effects in indirect and direct tasks: effects of age and interitem lag.Q48627250
Event-related potentials and the recollection of associative informationQ48871451
A comparison of the electrophysiological effects of formal and repetition primingQ49074931
P433issue2
P304page(s)155-166
P577publication date2002-02-01
P1433published inInternational Journal of PsychophysiologyQ18626009
P1476titleThe recognition potential and repetition effects
P478volume43

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q34442813Emotional states modulate the recognition potential during word processing
Q64090207Rapid stream stimulation can enhance the stimulus selectivity of early evoked responses to written characters but not faces
Q38437366Studying semantics in the brain: the rapid stream stimulation paradigm.

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