Annika Andersson
University of Oregon
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Publication
Featured researches published by Annika Andersson.
Cognition | 2008
Dare A. Baldwin; Annika Andersson; Jenny R. Saffran; Meredith Meyer
Human social, cognitive, and linguistic functioning depends on skills for rapidly processing action. Identifying distinct acts within the dynamic motion flow is one basic component of action processing; for example, skill at segmenting action is foundational to action categorization, verb learning, and comprehension of novel action sequences. Yet little is currently known about mechanisms that may subserve action segmentation. The present research documents that adults can register statistical regularities providing clues to action segmentation. This finding provides new evidence that structural knowledge gained by mechanisms such as statistical learning can play a role in action segmentation, and highlights a striking parallel between processing of action and processing in other domains, such as language.
Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience | 2018
Annika Andersson; Lisa D. Sanders; Donna Coch; Christina M. Karns; Helen J. Neville
During early literacy skills development, rhyming is an important indicator of the phonological precursors required for reading. To determine if neural signatures of rhyming are apparent in early childhood, we recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) from 3- to 5-year-old, preliterate children (N = 62) in an auditory prime-target nonword rhyming paradigm (e.g., bly-gry, blane-vox). Overall, nonrhyming targets elicited a larger negativity (N450) than rhyming targets over posterior regions. In contrast, rhyming targets elicited a larger negativity than nonrhyming targets over fronto-lateral sites. The amplitude of the two rhyming effects was correlated, such that a larger posterior effect occurred with a smaller anterior effect. To determine whether these neural signatures of rhyming related to phonological awareness, we divided the children into two groups based on phonological awareness scores while controlling for age and socioeconomic status. The posterior rhyming effect was stronger and more widely distributed in the group with better phonological awareness, whereas differences between groups for the anterior effect were small and not significant. This pattern of results suggests that the rhyme processes indexed by the anterior effect are developmental precursors to those indexed by the posterior effect. Overall, these findings demonstrate early establishment of distributed neurocognitive networks for rhyme processing.
Report on Progress in Brain Research; pp 105-116 (2008) | 2008
Helen J. Neville; Annika Andersson; O. Bagdade; Theodore A. Bell; Jeff Currin; Jessica Fanning; Scott Klein; Brittni Lauinger; Eric Pakulak; David J. Paulsen; Laura Sabourin; Courtney Stevens; S. Sundborg; Yoshiko Yamada
The Origins of human dialog: Speech and music / Parole et musique : Aux origines du dialogue humain; pp 277-290 (2009) | 2009
Helen J. Neville; Annika Andersson; Olivia Bagdade; Theodore A. Bell; Jeff Currin; Jessica Fanning; Linda Heidenreich; Scott Klein; Brittni Lauinger; Eric Pakulak; David J. Paulsen; Laura Sabourin; Courtney Stevens; Stephanie Sundborg; Yoshiko Yamada
Psychology Department; (2012) | 2012
Annika Andersson
Bilingualism: Language and Cognition | 2018
Annika Andersson; Susan Sayehli; Marianne Gullberg
Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, 2016 | 2016
Annika Andersson; Marianne Gullberg
Annual Meeting of the Society for the Neurobiology of Language, 2016 | 2016
Annika Andersson; Marianne Gullberg
Cognitive Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting, 2015 | 2015
Annika Andersson; Susan Sayehli; Marianne Gullberg
Society for the Neurobiology of Language, SNL | 2014
Susan Sayehli; Annika Andersson; Marianne Gullberg