16889-Colloquium
Progress in Brain Language Research
suggested background reading (see programme)
04.11.
Andre M Bastos, Julien Vezoli, Conrado A Bosman, et al.: Visual areas exert feedforward and feedback influences through distinct frequency channels. bioRxiv first posted online May 6, 2014. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/004804
18.11.
Tallon-Baudry, C., & Bertrand, O. (1999). Oscillatory gamma activity in humans and its role in object representation. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 3, 151-161.
20.11.
Näätänen, R., Kujala, T., Kreegipuu, K., Carlson, S., Escera, C., Baldeweg, T., & Ponton, C. 2011. The mismatch negativity: an index of cognitive decline in neuropsychiatric and neurological diseases and in ageing. Brain, 134(Pt 12), 3435-3453. doi: 10.1093/brain/awr064
25.11.
Nikulin, V. V., & Brismar, T. (2005). Long-range temporal correlations in electroencephalographic oscillations: Relation to topography, frequency band, age and gender. Neuroscience, 130(2), 549-558. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2004.10.007
02.12.
Berthier, M. L., & Pulvermüller, F. (2011). Neuroscience insights improve neurorehabilitation of post-stroke aphasia. Nature Reviews Neurology, 7(2), 86-97.
16.12.
Breitenstein, C., Grewe, T., Floel, A., Ziegler, W., Springer, L., Martus, P., & Baumgartner, A. 2014. How Effective is Intensive Aphasia Therapy under Routine Clinical Conditions? The German Randomised Controlled Multicentre Trial FCET2EC. Sprache-Stimme-Gehör, 38(1), 14-19. doi: DOI 10.1055/s-0033-1358457
13.01.
Boutonnet, B., Dering, B., Vinas-Guasch, N., & Thierry, G. (2013). Seeing objects through the language glass. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 25(10), 1702-1710.
Garagnani, M., Wennekers, T., & Pulvermüller, F. (2008). A neuroanatomically-grounded Hebbian learning model of attention-language interactions in the human brain. European Journal of Neuroscience, 27(2), 492-513.
16.1.
Miozzo, M., Pulvermüller, F., & Hauk, O. (2014). Early Parallel Activation of Semantics and Phonology in Picture Naming: Evidence from a Multiple Linear Regression MEG Study. Cerebral Cortex, in press/online, doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhu137
27.01.
Cappelle, B., Shtyrov, Y., & Pulvermüller, F. (2010). Heating up or cooling up the brain? MEG evidence that phrasal verbs are lexical units Brain and Language, 115(3), 189-201.