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Electroencephalography / Evoked potentials / Prosody / Prosodic unit / Musical syntax / Event-related potential / N400 / Stress / Intonation / Linguistics / Phonology / Phonetics


Musicians Detect Pitch Violation in a Foreign Language Better Than Nonmusicians: Behavioral and Electrophysiological Evidence Carlos Marques1, Sylvain Moreno2, Sa ˜o Luı´s Castro1, 2
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Document Date: 2008-01-06 15:51:58


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City

Munich / Neville / New York / Paris / /

Company

Oxford University Press / Kotz S. A. / Siebel / Cambridge University Press / M. & Hillyard S. A. / Matsuda / K. & Kotz S. A. / Sylvain Moreno2 Sa / /

Country

France / Portugal / /

Currency

pence / /

/

Facility

Massachusetts Institute of Technology / Amsterdam University / /

IndustryTerm

perceptual and cognitive processing / functional magnetic resonance imaging / music processing / syntactic processing / speech processing / Research using magnetic resonance imaging / on-line speech comprehension / language processing / pitch processing / semantic and prosodic processing / /

MusicGroup

Yes / /

Organization

Cambridge University / Universidade do Porto / French Ministry / Marseille Universite / Massachusetts Institute of Technology / Oxford University / Amsterdam University / /

Person

Daniele Scho / Marjorie Geva / Carlos Marques / Van Petten / Mireille Besson / Mitsuko Aramaki / Monique Chiambretto / Manuel Pereira Silva / /

Position

D. J. / speaker / RT / comfortable chair / musician / /

Product

ERPs / /

ProvinceOrState

Massachusetts / /

PublishedMedium

Current Opinion / Journal of Neuroscience / Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience / Nature Neuroscience / /

Technology

neuroscience / LAN / AV / magnetic resonance imaging / 2007 Massachusetts Institute of Technology / /

URL

www.praat.org / /

SocialTag