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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Early Language Development

Bridging brain and behaviour

Edited by Angela D. Friederici and Guillaume Thierry
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences / Bangor University

2008. xiv, 263 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 3475 9 / EUR 85.00 / USD 128.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9133 2 / EUR 85.00 / USD 128.00
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This book establishes a dialog between experimental psychology and electrophysiology in the study of infant language development. On the one hand, traditional methods of investigation into language development have reached a high level of refinement despite being confined to observing infants’ overt behavioral responses. On the other hand, more recent methods such as neuroimaging and, in particular, event-related potentials provide access to implicit responses from the infant brain while often relying on rather gross experimental contrasts. The aims of this book are both to provide neuroscientists with an overview of the ingenious behavioral paradigms that have been developed in the field of language development and to introduce the power of neurophysiological indices to behavioral experimentalists. The two approaches are compared at various levels of processing: phonetic discrimination, categorical perception, speech segmentation, syllable and word recognition, semantic priming. A general discussion brings together the two approaches, highlights their respective contributions and limitations and proposes constructive ideas for future integration.


Table of contents

List of Contributors
vii–viii
Preface
ix–x
Introduction to early language development: Bridging brain and behavior
Guillaume Thierry and Angela D. Friederici
xi–xiv
1. The method of event-related brain potentials in the study of cognitive processes: A tutorial
Claudia Männel
1–22
2. Event-related potential studies of early language processing at the phoneme, word, and sentence levels
Barbara T. Conboy, Maritza Rivera-Gaxiola, Juan Silva-Pereyra and Patricia K. Kuhl
23–64
3. Behavioral and electrophysiological exploration of early word segmentation in French: Distinguishing the syllabic and lexical levels.
Thierry Nazzi, Galina Iakimova, Josiane Bertoncini, Sylvain Mottet, Josette Serres and Scania de Schonen
65–89
4. Reflections on reflections of infant word recognition
Valesca Kooijman, Elizabeth K. Johnson and Anne Cutler
91–114
5. The onset of word form recognition: A behavioural and neurophysiological study
Guillaume Thierry and Marilyn May Vihman
115–135
6. Neurophysiological correlates of picture-word priming in one-year-olds
Manuela Friedrich
137–160
7. The effects of early word learning on brain development
Elizabeth A. Sheehan and Debra L. Mills
161–190
8. From perception to grammar
Jacques Mehler, Ansgar Endress, Judit Gervain and Marina Nespor
191–213
9. The development of syntactic brain correlates during the first years of life
Angela D. Friederici and Regine Oberecker
215–231
10. Language acquisition and ERP approaches: Prospects and challenges
David Poeppel and Akira Omaki
233–255
Glossary
257–260
Index
261–263