M
Marianna D. Eddy
Researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Publications - 46
Citations - 2575
Marianna D. Eddy is an academic researcher from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Repetition priming & N400. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 43 publications receiving 2284 citations. Previous affiliations of Marianna D. Eddy include United States Department of the Army & Tufts University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Regionally Localized Thinning of the Cerebral Cortex in Schizophrenia
Gina R. Kuperberg,Matthew R. Broome,Philip McGuire,Anthony S. David,Marianna D. Eddy,Fujiro Ozawa,Donald C. Goff,W. Caroline West,Steven Williams,Andre van der Kouwe,David H. Salat,Anders M. Dale,Bruce Fischl +12 more
TL;DR: Patients with chronic schizophrenia showed widespread cortical thinning that particularly affected the prefrontal and temporal cortices, which might reflect underlying neuropathological abnormalities in cortical structure.
Journal ArticleDOI
Regionally localized thinning of the cerebral cortex in schizophrenia
Gina R. Kuperberg,Matthew R. Broome,Philip McGuire,Anthony S. David,Marianna D. Eddy,F. Ozawa,Donald C. Goff,W.C. West,Steve C.R. Williams,A.J.W. van der Kouwe,David H. Salat,Anders M. Dale,Bruce Fischl +12 more
TL;DR: Patients with chronic schizophrenia showed widespread cortical thinning that particularly affected the prefrontal and temporal cortices, which might reflect underlying neuropathological abnormalities in cortical structure.
Journal ArticleDOI
Neural correlates of processing syntactic, semantic, and thematic relationships in sentences
TL;DR: Findings support the theory that the cost of syntactic processing on a verb is influenced by the precise thematic relationships between that verb and its preceding arguments.
Journal ArticleDOI
How Dogs Navigate to Catch Frisbees
TL;DR: Using micro-video cameras attached to the heads of 2 dogs, it is confirmed that dogs use the same viewer-based navigational heuristics previously found with baseball players, and a common interception strategy that extends both across species and to complex target trajectories.
Journal ArticleDOI
Masked repetition priming and event-related brain potentials: a new approach for tracking the time-course of object perception.
TL;DR: A new approach to studying the time-course of the perceptual processing of objects is reported by combining for the first time the masked repetition priming technique with the recording of event-related potentials (ERPs).