They use an artificial language with real structures to show how
new linguistic information is integrated into the same brain areas used for your native language.
The brain does this by taking in
new linguistic information in the form of new words and auditory strings, and then integrating this with information that is already stored in the «mental lexicon.»
Not exact matches
Results of a
new study by cognitive psychologist and speech scientist Alexandra Jesse and her
linguistics undergraduate student Michael Bartoli at the University of Massachusetts Amherst should help to settle a long - standing disagreement among cognitive psychologists about the
information we use to recognize people speaking to us.
New firms, products and services often claim to espouse benefits which on closer examination reveal that the founders don't understand the nuances of providing
information to people who may have limited functional or digital literacy, or are from diverse socio - economic,
linguistic and cultural backgrounds.