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Tali Ditman

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  32
Citations -  2258

Tali Ditman is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sentence & Reading (process). The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 32 publications receiving 2070 citations. Previous affiliations of Tali Ditman include Tufts University & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Hippocampal activation during transitive inference in humans.

TL;DR: It is concluded that immediate access to simple stimulus‐stimulus relationships is mediated via the parahippocampal gyrus, whereas the flexible representation of memory requires the recruitment of the hippocampus.
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When You and I Share Perspectives Pronouns Modulate Perspective Taking During Narrative Comprehension

TL;DR: These experiments demonstrate that pronoun variation and discourse context mediate the degree of embodiment experienced during narrative comprehension: in all cases, readers mentally simulate objects and events, but they embody an actor's perspective only when directly addressed as the subject of a sentence.
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On the incrementality of pragmatic processing: An ERP investigation of informativeness and pragmatic abilities.

TL;DR: The results suggest that, while pragmatic scalar meaning can incrementally contribute to sentence comprehension, this contribution is dependent on contextual factors, whether these are derived from individual pragmatic abilities or the overall experimental context.
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Sustained activation of the hippocampus in response to fearful faces in schizophrenia.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that there is abnormal modulation of hippocampal responses to fearful faces in schizophrenia, and attenuated hippocampal habituation in schizophrenia is not associated with a reduction in initial activation.
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Transitive inference in schizophrenia: impairments in relational memory organization.

TL;DR: SZ patients were less accurate than controls in responding to the relational BD pairs, consistent with the hypothesis that higher-level memory processes associated with relational memory organization are impaired in SZ.