Mikael Roll
111 – 120 of 125
- show: 10
- |
- sort: year (new to old)
Close
Embed this list
<iframe src=""
width=""
height=""
allowtransparency="true"
frameborder="0">
</iframe>
- 2010
-
Mark
Atypical abstract associations in aphasia measured by a semantic space model
(2010) The 20th Annual Rotman Research Institute Conference, The Frontal Lobes In Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
- Contribution to journal › Published meeting abstract
-
Mark
Modelling the Meaning of Words: Neural Correlates of Abstract and Concrete Noun Processing
(2010) The 20th Annual Rotman Research Institute Conference, The Frontal Lobes In Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
- Contribution to journal › Published meeting abstract
- 2009
-
Mark
Left-edge boundary tone and main clause verb effects on syntactic processing in embedded clauses - An ERP study
- Contribution to journal › Article
-
Mark
The neurophysiology of grammatical constraints : ERP studies on the influence of prosody and pragmatics on the processing of syntax and morphology in Swedish
(2009)
- Thesis › Doctoral thesis (compilation)
-
Mark
Implications of aphasia on abstract and concrete noun processing
- Contribution to journal › Published meeting abstract
-
Mark
The neurocognitive reality of a left-edge boundary tone in on-line sentence processing
- Contribution to journal › Published meeting abstract
-
Mark
Grammaticalization of prosody in the brain
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Paper in conference proceeding
-
Mark
Brain Talk : discourse with and in the brain : papers from the first Birgit Rausing Language Program Conference in Linguistics, Lund, June 2008
Alter, Kai ; Horne, Merle LU
; Lindgren, Magnus
LU
; Roll, Mikael
LU
and von Koss Torkildsen, Janne
(2009)
In Birgit Rausing Language Program Conference in Linguistics
1.
- Book/Report › Anthology (editor)
- 2008
-
Mark
Neurophysiology of a left-edge boundary tone using natural and edited F0
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Paper in conference proceeding
- 2007
-
Mark
Measuring Syntactic Complexity in Spontaneous Spoken Swedish
- Contribution to journal › Article