Диссертация (Experimental study of several core concepts of theoretical morphology (on the material of russian) - regularity, syncretism, markedness), страница 7
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Vol. 61. 2009. P. 206–223.24Appendix A.Paper “An ER-fMRI study of Russian inflectional morphology”Slioussar, N., Kireev, M.V., Chernigovskaya, T.V., Kataeva, G.V., Korotkov, A.D., &Medvedev, S.V. (2014). An ER-fMRI study of Russian inflectional morphology. Brainand Language, 130, 33-41. DOI 10.1016/j.bandl.2014.01.006.AbstractThe generation of regular and irregular past tense verbs has long been a testing groundfor different models of inflection in the mental lexicon. Behavioral studies examined avariety of languages, but neuroimaging studies rely almost exclusively on English andGerman data. In our fMRI experiment, participants inflected Russian verbs and nouns ofdifferent types and corresponding nonce stimuli.
Irregular real and nonce verbs activatedinferior frontal and inferior parietal regions more than regular verbs did, while no areaswere more activated in the opposite comparison. We explain this activation pattern byincreasing processing load: a parametric contrast revealed that these regions are also moreactivated for nonce stimuli compared to real stimuli. A very similar pattern is found fornouns. Unlike most previously obtained results, our findings are more readily compatiblewith the single-system approach to inflection, which does not postulate a categoricaldifference between regular and irregular forms.The link on the publisher’s websiteThis is not an open access paper, so according to the publisher’s policy it cannot bereproduced. It can be accessed on the publisher’s website:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0093934X1400011X25Appendix B.Paper “Changes in functional connectivity within the fronto-temporalbrain network induced by regular and irregular Russian verbproduction”Kireev, M.V., Slioussar, N., Chernigovskaya, T.V., Korotkov, A.D., & Medvedev, S.V.(2015).
Changes in functional connectivity within the fronto-temporal brain networkinduced by regular and irregular Russian verb production. Frontiers in HumanNeuroscience, 9, 36. DOI 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00036.26ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLEpublished: 18 February 2015doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00036Changes in functional connectivity within thefronto-temporal brain network induced by regular andirregular Russian verb productionMaxim Kireev 1,2 , Natalia Slioussar 3,2 *, Alexander D.
Korotkov1,4 , Tatiana V. Chernigovskaya 1,2 andSvyatoslav V. Medvedev 11N.P. Bechtereva Institute of the Human Brain, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, RussiaFaculty of Liberal Arts and Sciences, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia3Faculty of Philology, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia4Radiological Center of Tyumen Regional Oncology Center, Tyumen, Russia2Edited by:Mirjana Bozic, University ofCambridge, UKReviewed by:Yury Y. Shtyrov, Aarhus University,DenmarkEmmanuel A. Stamatakis, Universityof Cambridge, UK*Correspondence:Natalia Slioussar, Faculty of Philology,Higher School of Economics, StarayaBasmannaya Street 21/4, Moscow105066, Russiae-mail: slioussar@gmail.comFunctional connectivity between brain areas involved in the processing of complex languageforms remains largely unexplored.
Contributing to the debate about neural mechanismsunderlying regular and irregular inflectional morphology processing in the mental lexicon,we conducted an fMRI experiment in which participants generated forms from differenttypes of Russian verbs and nouns as well as from nonce stimuli.The data were subjected toa whole brain voxel-wise analysis of context dependent changes in functional connectivity[the so-called psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analysis]. Unlike previously reportedsubtractive results that reveal functional segregation between brain areas, PPI providescomplementary information showing how these areas are functionally integrated in aparticular task.