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EUSKARAZ by K. Erdozia

Research paper thumbnail of EUSKAL GRAMATIKA PROZESATZEN: HASTAPENETAKO ZENBAIT EMAITZA

Etxepare R., Gomez R., Lakarra J.A. (eds.) Gorazarre Beñat Oihartzabali–Festschrift for Bernard Oyharçabal ASJU XLIII-1/2, Bilbao, pp. 553-564.ISBN: 0582-6152 , 2010

After a brief introduction to ERP methods in the study of language, we report some recent results... more After a brief introduction to ERP methods in the study of language, we report some recent results from a set of experiments investigating morphosyntactic processing in Basque. First we report results from experiments that focus on word-order processing, with special attention to verb medial sentences, where subjects show no preference for either SVO or OVS orders, in contrast with the sharp asymmetry found in SOV versus OSV orders in previous work. Second, we report results from a set of conductual and ERP experiments targeted to explore object agreement, which suggest that it is neurocognitively distinct from subject agreement.

Papers by K. Erdozia

Research paper thumbnail of Word order and ambiguity resolution in Basque: behavioral and electrophysiological evidences

Research paper thumbnail of Age of acquisition and proficiency on L2 syntactic processing

Research paper thumbnail of Individual differences in syntactic processing of a second language: Electrophysiological evidence

Research paper thumbnail of EUSKAL GRAMATIKA PROZESATZEN: HASTAPENETAKO ZENBAIT EMAITZA

Etxepare R., Gomez R., Lakarra J.A. (eds.) Gorazarre Beñat Oihartzabali–Festschrift for Bernard Oyharçabal ASJU XLIII-1/2, Bilbao, pp. 553-564.ISBN: 0582-6152 , 2010

After a brief introduction to ERP methods in the study of language, we report some recent results... more After a brief introduction to ERP methods in the study of language, we report some recent results from a set of experiments investigating morphosyntactic processing in Basque. First we report results from experiments that focus on word-order processing, with special attention to verb medial sentences, where subjects show no preference for either SVO or OVS orders, in contrast with the sharp asymmetry found in SOV versus OSV orders in previous work. Second, we report results from a set of conductual and ERP experiments targeted to explore object agreement, which suggest that it is neurocognitively distinct from subject agreement.

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