L
Lars Meyer
Researcher at Max Planck Society
Publications - 58
Citations - 2115
Lars Meyer is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sentence processing & Sentence. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 54 publications receiving 1593 citations. Previous affiliations of Lars Meyer include University of Münster.
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The neural oscillations of speech processing and language comprehension: State of the art and emerging mechanisms
TL;DR: An accessible and extensive review of the functional mechanisms that neural oscillations subserve in speech processing and language comprehension and synthesises a mapping from each linguistic processing domain to a unique set of subserving oscillatory mechanisms.
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Dual‐Color STED Microscopy at 30‐nm Focal‐Plane Resolution
Lars Meyer,Dominik Wildanger,Rebecca Medda,Annedore Punge,Silvio O. Rizzoli,Gerald Donnert,Stefan W. Hell +6 more
TL;DR: Owing to its sensitivity and noninvasiveness, far-field fluo-rescence microscopy would be almost ideal for biological imaging if the resolution of its established variants were not limited by diffraction.
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Linguistic Bias Modulates Interpretation of Speech via Neural Delta-Band Oscillations
TL;DR: An internal linguistic bias for grouping words into phrases can modulate the interpretational impact of speech prosody via delta-band oscillatory phase, which should surface in delta- band oscillations when grouping patterns chosen by comprehenders differ from those indicated by prosody.
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New fluorinated rhodamines for optical microscopy and nanoscopy.
Gyuzel Yu. Mitronova,Vladimir N. Belov,Mariano L. Bossi,Christian A. Wurm,Lars Meyer,Rebecca Medda,Gael Moneron,Stefan Bretschneider,Christian Eggeling,Stefan Jakobs,Stefan W. Hell +10 more
TL;DR: The new photostable rhodamine dyes represented by the compounds 1 a-r and 3-5 are proposed as efficient fluorescent markers with unique combination of structural features and are able to pass the plasma membrane of living cells, introducing them as potential labels for recent live-cell-tag approaches.
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Building by Syntax: The Neural Basis of Minimal Linguistic Structures
TL;DR: The present results suggest that merge, the process of binding words together into syntactic hierarchies, is primarily supported by BA 44 in the IFG, which may reflect structure‐building syntactic processing and the encoding of propositional meaning initiated by the verb.