Publication: The brain knows the difference: two types of grammatical violations
The brain knows the difference: two types of grammatical violations
Date
Date
Date
Citations
Friederici, A. D., & Meyer, M. (2004). The brain knows the difference: two types of grammatical violations. Brain Research, 1000(1–2), 72–77. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2003.10.057
Abstract
Abstract
Abstract
The brain has been shown to honor the fundamental linguistic difference between semantic and syntactic information. Here we demonstrate that it even further indicates the necessity to distinguish between two differential syntactic processes: that is to say between the processing of phrase structure information necessary to build up syntactic structures on-line and verb argument structure information crucial to build up representations of who is doing what to whom. The former process is reflected in the event-related brain potentials (
Metrics
Views
Additional indexing
Creators (Authors)
Volume
Volume
Volume
Number
Number
Number
Page range/Item number
Page range/Item number
Page range/Item number
Page end
Page end
Page end
Item Type
Item Type
Item Type
In collections
Language
Language
Language
Publication date
Publication date
Publication date
Date available
Date available
Date available
ISSN or e-ISSN
ISSN or e-ISSN
ISSN or e-ISSN
OA Status
OA Status
OA Status
Publisher DOI
Metrics
Views
Citations
Friederici, A. D., & Meyer, M. (2004). The brain knows the difference: two types of grammatical violations. Brain Research, 1000(1–2), 72–77. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2003.10.057