作者norchen (乌金彻令)
看板Cognitive
标题[情报] Southern Taiwan Psycholinguistic Circle Talk on 6/5
时间Wed Jun 3 11:14:10 2009
* Time: 6/5/2009, Friday, 3:30-5:40pm.
* Location: 5F Faculty & Student Lounge,
Yu-ping building, Kuang-fu campus, NCKU
(成大光复校区云平 大 楼5楼交谊室)
(Please check the map at
http://www.ncku.edu.tw/ver2006/ch/ncku/view.htm).
* Talk Schedule:
3:30-4:30pm
Dr. Chien-jer Charles Lin (National Taiwan Normal University)
Title: Thematic patterns and comprehending Chinese relative clauses in context
4:40-5:40pm
Dr. Shiaohui Chan (Center for Mind and Brain, UC Davis School of Medicine)
Title: The linguistic sequencing role of a “non-language” area of the brain
Speech Abstracts
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Thematic Patterns and Comprehending Chinese Relative Clauses in Context
Chien-Jer Charles Lin
National Taiwan Normal University
In this talk, I discuss the syntactic and contextual issues in the processing
of Chinese relative clauses. Experiments of sentence comprehension will be
presented to show that the structural position of a relativized gap plays an
important role in the processing of Chinese relative clauses. In addition, I
present evidence demonstrating that the thematic patterns in the contexts
prior to relative clauses can be a source of bias. Contexts themselves
should, therefore, be constrained in the examination of structural issues in
head-final relative-clause processing.
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The linguistic sequencing role of a “non-language” area of the brain
Dr. Shiaohui Chan
Center for Mind and Brain, UC Davis School of Medicine
Due to the common belief that language is unique to humans, great emphasis
has been placed on the neocortex—the most evolved part of the human brain—
while the role of the subcortical areas has been minimized. Although
Lieberman (2000) has suggested an evolutionary link between language and the
basal ganglia (BG), a set of subcortical nuclei whose major function is to
learn/execute motor sequence, the linguistic role of the BG remains
controversial.
This project used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI) to study the linguistic involvement of the BG. In this study, the idea
of motor sequencing was developed into “linguistic sequencing”—
particularly syntactic and conceptual sequencing—to test whether the BG were
involved in the abstract sequencing of language. The results showed that a
functional network in the left hemisphere was activated when subjects were
computing syntactic/conceptual hierarchical structure, including the BG
(especially the head of the caudate nucleus), Broca’s area, and,
interestingly, the pre-supplementary motor area. To summarize, the head of
the left caudate nucleus—a subcortical “non-language” area—was found to
be directly involved in sequencing hierarchical structure of language. Future
research on biological basis of language should thus look into areas
underneath the cortex to better understand the nature of language.
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1F:推 mulkcs:阿 置底满了 囧rz 要不然我就放置底 xD 06/03 17:06
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