Gamma band suppression by pseudowords: Evidence for lexical cell assemblies?

The EEG and MEG studies cited in the target article found reduced gamma band power following pseudowords in comparison with words. Pulvermüller interprets this power difference in terms of reverberating lexical cell assemblies. An alternative interpretation in terms of latency jitter in the gamma ba...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Behavioral and brain sciences 1999-04, Vol.22 (2), p.305-306
Hauptverfasser: Urbach, Thomas P., Davidson, Robert E., Drake, Robert M.
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creator Urbach, Thomas P.
Davidson, Robert E.
Drake, Robert M.
description The EEG and MEG studies cited in the target article found reduced gamma band power following pseudowords in comparison with words. Pulvermüller interprets this power difference in terms of reverberating lexical cell assemblies. An alternative interpretation in terms of latency jitter in the gamma band following pseudowords is proposed that does not appeal to lexical cell assemblies.
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source Periodicals Index Online; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Brain
Cells
Cognition & reasoning
Language
Learning
Open Peer Commentary
Pulvermüller: Brain's language
title Gamma band suppression by pseudowords: Evidence for lexical cell assemblies?
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