Home Linguistics & Semiotics Chapter 9 Brain mechanisms for the processing of Japanese subject-marking particles wa, ga, and no
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Chapter 9 Brain mechanisms for the processing of Japanese subject-marking particles wa, ga, and no

  • Toshiki Iwabuchi , Satoshi Nambu , Kentaro Nakatani and Michiru Makuuchi
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© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Series preface VII
  3. Preface IX
  4. Contents XI
  5. Contributors XV
  6. Chapter 1 Japanese Psycholinguistics from Comparative Perspectives: Interaction Between Linguistic and Nonlinguistic Factors 1
  7. Chapter 2 High sense of agency versus low sense of agency in event framing in Japanese 9
  8. Chapter 3 Locality-based retrieval effects are dependent on dependency type: A case study of a negative polarity dependency in Japanese 31
  9. Chapter 4 An EEG analysis of long-distance scrambling in Japanese: Head direction, reanalysis, and working memory constraints 55
  10. Chapter 5 The time course of SOV and OSV sentence processing in Japanese 77
  11. Chapter 6 Sentence processing cost caused by word order and context: Some considerations regarding the functional significance of P600 99
  12. Chapter 7 The adaptive nature of language comprehension 115
  13. Chapter 8 (Dis)similarities between semantically transparent and lexicalized nominal suffixation in Japanese: An ERP study using a masked priming paradigm 133
  14. Chapter 9 Brain mechanisms for the processing of Japanese subject-marking particles wa, ga, and no 163
  15. Chapter 10 Pragmatic atypicality of individuals with autism spectrum disorder: Preliminary results of a production study of sentence-final particles in Japanese 183
  16. Chapter 11 Auditory comprehension of Japanese scrambled sentences by patients with aphasia: An ERP study 201
  17. Chapter 12 Experimental studies on clefts and right dislocations in child Japanese 223
  18. Chapter 13 Developmental changes in the interpretation of an ambiguous structure and an ambiguous prosodic cue in Japanese 255
  19. Chapter 14 Exceptive constructions in Japanese 275
  20. Index 311
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