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1 y mapping the alphabetic characters onto the spoken word.
2 ing, and integration of a heard sound with a spoken word.
3 itten text before a degraded (noise-vocoded) spoken word.
4 EG data while human participants listened to spoken words.
5 uals report color experiences when they hear spoken words.
6 r the acoustic-phonetic cues at the onset of spoken words.
7 about listeners' brain activity as they hear spoken words.
8 pictures, indicating their understanding of spoken words.
9 into neural mechanisms contributing to human spoken language.
10 hen it comes to an important human attribute-spoken language.
11 y integration in sign language compared with spoken language.
12 tational primitive for the representation of spoken language.
13 but no other animal, make meaningful use of spoken language.
14 eme difficulties producing and understanding spoken language.
15 unique in their ability to communicate using spoken language.
16 ationships among sign language, gesture, and spoken language.
17 ind from birth responds to touch, sound, and spoken language.
18 "visual") brain regions respond to sound and spoken language.
19 namics adjusts to the temporal properties of spoken language.
20 scripts which encode the sound properties of spoken language.
21 behaviorally relevant oscillatory tuning for spoken language.
22 ocalize very much like human infants acquire spoken language.
23 explain the evolutionary advantage of human spoken language.
24 amental difference versus human gestures and spoken language [1, 5] that suggests these features have
25 e phenotypes were (1) phonemic awareness (of spoken words); (2) phonological decoding (of printed non
27 loped by deaf individuals who cannot acquire spoken language and have not been exposed to sign langua
28 with both the perception of visual words and spoken language, and it examines how such functional cha
29 e neural parallel between birdsong and human spoken language, and they have important consequences fo
31 work of neural structures, regardless of how spoken words are represented orthographically in a writi
33 panzee (Pan troglodytes) that recognizes 128 spoken words, asking whether she could understand such s
34 Functional flexibility is a sine qua non in spoken language, because all words or sentences can be p
35 ille words and occipital cortex responded to spoken words but not differentially with "old"/"new" rec
36 y tool humans use to exchange information is spoken language, but the exact speed of the neuronal mec
37 ests that the semantic representation of the spoken words can be activated automatically in the late
38 Learning to read requires an awareness that spoken words can be decomposed into the phonologic const
40 onclude that in the absence of visual input, spoken language colonizes the visual system during brain
41 ngs support the dual neurocognitive model of spoken language comprehension and emphasize the importan
43 issue within a dual neurocognitive model of spoken language comprehension in which core linguistic f
44 ating children's syntactic processing during spoken language comprehension, and a wealth of research
45 of hearing loss on neural systems supporting spoken language comprehension, beginning with age-relate
46 plore the brain regions that are involved in spoken language comprehension, fractionating this system
50 al coordinate data for lip shape during four spoken words decomposed into seven visemes (which includ
52 ded woman with left-hemisphere dominance for spoken language, demonstrated a dissociation between spo
53 n V4/V8 when imagining colors in response to spoken words, despite overtraining on word-color associa
55 ification (hearing aids) that can facilitate spoken language development in young children with sever
56 itudinal, and multidimensional assessment of spoken language development over a 3-year period in chil
57 Two groups of participants learned novel spoken words (e.g., cathedruke) that overlapped phonolog
60 s.;>This concept implies vocal continuity of spoken language evolution at the motor level, elucidatin
61 ver, it has not been clear whether it is the spoken word forms or the meanings (or both) of nouns and
63 cabulary and learning the sound structure of spoken language go hand in hand as language acquisition
65 s on one of the first steps in comprehending spoken language: How do listeners extract the most funda
66 ic evolution of this crucial prerequisite of spoken language: (i) monosynaptic refinement of the proj
67 elation to performance on a standard test of spoken language in 16 chronic aphasic patients both befo
71 n predominantly based on written text or the spoken word increasing numbers are now drawing on visual
72 f a comprehensive theory of the evolution of spoken language" indicated in their conclusion by Ackerm
73 word recognition propose that the onset of a spoken word initiates a continuous process of activation
77 ndings suggest that occipital plasticity for spoken language is independent of plasticity for Braille
78 ed that one of the fundamental properties of spoken language is the arbitrary relation between sound
79 in young children was associated with better spoken language learning than would be predicted from th
80 sleep in the consolidation of a naturalistic spoken-language learning task that produces generalizati
81 poral regions in which symbolic gestures and spoken words may be mapped onto common, corresponding co
82 old control was critical to the evolution of spoken language, much as it today allows us to learn vow
84 nts evidence that audiovisual integration in spoken language occurs when one modality (vision) acts o
88 grated in cognitive and/or motor theories on spoken language origins and with more analogous nonhuman
89 f the roles assigned to the basal ganglia in spoken language parallel very well their contribution to
90 r implantation showed greater improvement in spoken language performance (10.4; 95% confidence interv
93 g ability on the neural processes supporting spoken language processing in humans, we used functional
94 activate orthographic representations during spoken language processing, while those with reading dif
102 ns: clinical diagnosis, language impairment (spoken language quotient <85) and reading discrepancy (n
104 and semantic processes in Chinese disyllabic spoken word recognition are modulated by top-down mechan
106 We propose a predictive coding model of spoken word recognition in which STG neurons represent t
111 ws one to project the internal processing of spoken-word recognition onto a two-dimensional layout of
112 his idea, we proposed that AV integration in spoken language reflects visually induced weighting of p
118 ear implantation, some deaf children develop spoken language skills approaching those of their hearin
120 continuous goal-directed hand movement in a spoken-language task, online accrual of acoustic-phoneti
122 ological awareness, the auditory analysis of spoken language that relates the sounds of language to p
123 opriate behavior, they have difficulty using spoken language to explain why it is inappropriate.
125 subjects, we compared semantic processing of spoken words to equivalent processing of environmental s
130 s have argued that sign is no different from spoken language, with all of the same linguistic structu
132 fMRI response patterns that enable decoding spoken words within languages (within-language discrimin
133 tantiation of written language processes and spoken language, working memory and other cognitive skil
134 with dyslexia for a wide variety of stimuli, spoken words, written words, visual objects, and faces.
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