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Neurolinguistics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 July 2006

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06–609Ávila, cesar (U Jaime I, Spain), Julio González, María-antonia Parcet & Vicente Belloch, Selective alteration of native but not second language articulation in a patient with Foreign Accent Syndrome. NeuroReport (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins) 15.14 (2004), 2267–2270.

06–610Conboy, Barbara T. (U Washington, USA; bconboy@u.washington.edu) & Debra L. Mills, Two languages, one developing brain: Event-related potentials to words in bilingual toddlers. Developmental Science (Blackwell) 9.1 (2006), 1–12.

06–611Elston-Guettler, Kerrie E. (Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Germany; guettler@cbs.mpg.de), Thomas C. Gunter & Sonja A. Kotz, Zooming into L2: Global language context and adjustment affect processing of interlingual homographs in sentences. Cognitive Brain Research (Elsevier) 25.1 (2005), 57–70.

06–612Frenck-Mestre, Cheryl (Centre National de Recherche Scientifique, France), Jean-Luc Antón, Muriel Roth, Jyotsna Vaid & Francois Viallet, Articulation in early and late bilinguals' two languages: Evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging. NeuroReport (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins) 16.7 (2005), 761–765.

06–613Hahne, Anja (Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Germany; hahne@cbs.mpg.de), Jutta L. Mueller & Harald Clahsen, Morphological processing in a second language: Behavioral and event-related brain potential evidence for storage and decomposition. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (MIT Press) 18.1 (2006), 121–134.

06–614Ihara, Aya (National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Japan; ayihara@nips.ac.jp) & Ryusuke Kakigi, Oscillatory activity in the occipitotemporal area related to the visual perception of letters of a first/second language and pseudoletters. NeuroImage (Elsevier) 29.3 (2006), 789–796.

06–615Lee, Susan S. & Mirella Dapretto (U California at Los Angeles, USA; mirella@loni.ucla.edu), Metaphorical vs. literal word meanings: fMRI evidence against a selective role of the right hemisphere. NeuroImage (Elsevier) 29.2 (2006), 536–544.

06–616Lehtonen, Minna H. (Abo Akademi University, Turku, Finland), Matti Laine, Jussi Neimi, Tormod thomsen, Victor vorobyev & Kenneth Hugdahl, Brain correlates of sentence translation in Finnish–Norwegian bilinguals. NeuroReport (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins) 16.6 (2005), 601–610.

06–617Meschyan, Gayane (U Houston, USA; gayane.meschyan@times.uh.edu) & Arturo E. Hernandez, Impact of language proficiency and orthographic transparency on bilingual word reading: An fMRI investigation. NeuroImage (Elsevier) 29.4 (2006), 1135–1140.

06–618Papafragou, Anna (U Delaware, USA; papafragou@psych.udel.edu), Christine Massey & Lila Gleitman, When English proposes what Greek presupposes: The cross-linguistic encoding of motion events. Cognition (Elsevier) 98.3 (2006), B75–B87.

06–619Pylkkaenen, Linna (New York U, USA; liina.pylkkanen@nyu.edu), Rodolfo Llinás & Gregory L. Murphy, The representation of polysemy: MEG evidence. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (MIT Press) 18.1 (2006), 97–109.

06–620Tatsuno, Yoshinori & Kuniyoshi L. Sakai (U Tokyo, Japan;sakai@mind.c.u-toyko.ac.jp,) Language-related activations in the left prefrontal regions are differentially modulated by age, proficiency, and task demands. The Journal of Neuroscience (Society for Neuroscience) 25.7 (2005), 1637–1644.

06–621Venkatraman, Vinod (SingHealth, Singapore; vinod.venkatraman@singhealth.com.sg), Soon Chun Siong, Michael W. L. Chee & Daniel Ansari, Effects of language switching on arithmetic: A bilingual fMRI study. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (MIT Press) 18.1 (2006), 64–74.

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Abstract
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2006 Cambridge University Press