11 results match your criteria: "Center for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience[Affiliation]"
Cogn Dev
September 2022
San Diego State University, Center for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience, 5500 Campanile Dr, San Diego, CA 92182, USA.
Toddler vocabulary knowledge and speed of word processing are associated with downstream language and cognition. Here, we investigate whether these associations differ across measures. At age two, 101 participants (55 monolingual French-speaking and 46 monolingual English-speaking children) completed a two-alternative forced choice task, yielding measures of decontextualized vocabulary (number of correct responses) and haptic speed of word processing (latency of correct responses).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobiol Lang (Camb)
December 2021
School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, USA.
Bilinguals' need to suppress the activation of their other language while speaking has been proposed to result in enhanced cognitive control abilities outside of language. Several studies therefore suggest shared cognitive control processes across linguistic and non-linguistic tasks. Here we investigate this potential overlap using scalp electroencephalographic recordings and the Laplacian transformation, providing an estimation of the current source density and enabling the separation of EEG components in space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Speech Lang Hear Res
December 2021
Center for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, San Diego State University, CA.
Purpose: This study investigated within-language and between-language associations between phonological memory, vocabulary, and grammar in French-English ( = 43) and Spanish-English ( = 25) bilingual children at 30, 36, and 48 months. It was predicted that phonological memory would display both within-language and between-language relations to language development and that these relations would be stronger at the youngest age.
Method: Bilingual children participated in free-play sessions in both of their languages at each age, from which vocabulary and grammatical information (number of different words and mean length of utterance) was extracted.
Neuron
July 2021
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA; Department of Neurology, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, CA, USA.
Despite increased awareness of the lack of gender equity in academia and a growing number of initiatives to address issues of diversity, change is slow, and inequalities remain. A major source of inequity is gender bias, which has a substantial negative impact on the careers, work-life balance, and mental health of underrepresented groups in science. Here, we argue that gender bias is not a single problem but manifests as a collection of distinct issues that impact researchers' lives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurol
February 2021
Veterans Affairs Northern California Health Care System, Martinez, CA, United States.
Proactive interference in working memory refers to the fact that memory of past experiences can interfere with the ability to hold new information in working memory. The left inferior frontal gyrus (LIFG) has been proposed to play an important role in resolving proactive interference in working memory. However, the role of white matter pathways and other cortical regions has been less investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychophysiology
May 2021
Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Event-related potentials (ERPs) derived from electroencephalography (EEG) have proven useful for understanding linguistic processes during language perception and production. Words are commonly produced in sequences, yet most ERP studies have used single-word experimental designs. Single-word designs reduce potential ERP overlap in word sequence production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Lang
April 2019
University of California San Francisco, Department of Neurological Surgery, United States.
Human language is organized along two main processing streams connecting posterior temporal cortex and inferior frontal cortex in the left hemisphere, travelling dorsal and ventral to the Sylvian fissure. Some views propose a dorsal motor versus ventral semantic division. Others propose division by combinatorial mechanism, with the dorsal stream responsible for combining elements into a sequence and the ventral stream for forming semantic dependencies independent of sequential order.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropsychologia
November 2009
Wolfson Center for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Bangor University, Bangor, United Kingdom.
To investigate the role of the basal ganglia in integrating voluntary and reflexive behaviour, the current study examined the ability of patients with Parkinson's disease to voluntarily control oculomotor reflexes. We measured the size of the fixation offset effect (the reduction in saccadic reaction time when a fixation point is removed) during a block of pro- and a block of anti-saccades. Healthy controls showed the expected reduction of the FOE during the anti-saccades, which results from efforts to suppress reflexive eye movements (a preparatory set characterized by increased internal control and reduced external control).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Brain Res
February 2009
Wolfson Center for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Bangor University, Bangor, UK.
The reduction in saccade latency when the fixation point is removed (fixation offset effect-FOE) reflects the degree to which fixation neurons are under influence by a stimulus at fixation. Strategic manipulations of oculomotor readiness that bring these neurons under endogenous control reduce the magnitude of the FOE. Using an aging foreperiod paradigm, and the FOE as a marker for cortical control of reflexive fixation, we showed that, for both prosaccades and antisaccades, increasing preparation across the foreperiod reduced both saccade latency and the FOE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProg Brain Res
January 2009
Wolfson Center for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience, Bangor University, Bangor, UK.
The pulvinar nucleus of the thalamus has been considered as a key structure for visual attention functions (Grieve, K.L. et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain
August 2008
Wolfson Center for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience, Bangor University, Gwynedd LL57 2AS, UK.
The pulvinar is an important structure for visual attention function. Spatial and temporal attention was examined in three patients with varying pulvinar lesions. Spatial and temporal deficits were dissociable.
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