T
Tiina Parviainen
Researcher at University of Jyväskylä
Publications - 64
Citations - 1203
Tiina Parviainen is an academic researcher from University of Jyväskylä. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetoencephalography & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 50 publications receiving 930 citations. Previous affiliations of Tiina Parviainen include Aalto University & Helsinki University of Technology.
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Perceiving and naming actions and objects
Mia Liljeström,Antti Tarkiainen,Tiina Parviainen,Jan Kujala,Jussi Numminen,Jaana Hiltunen,Matti Laine,Riitta Salmelin +7 more
TL;DR: Action images, regardless of whether verbs or nouns were named, evoked stronger activation than object-only images in the posterior middle temporal cortex bilaterally, the left temporo-parietal junction and the left frontal cortex, a network previously identified in processing of action knowledge.
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Children show right-lateralized effects of spoken word-form learning
TL;DR: It is proposed that children, when learning new word forms in either native or foreign language, are not yet constrained by left-hemispheric segmental processing and established sublexical native-language representations Instead, they may rely more on supra-segmental contours and prosody.
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Time Course of Top-down and Bottom-up Influences on Syllable Processing in the Auditory Cortex
TL;DR: Track the neural time course of syllable processing with magnetoencephalography shows that this continuous construction of meaning-based representations is aided by both top-down and bottom-up cues in the speech signal.
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Cortical differentiation of speech and nonspeech sounds at 100 ms: implications for dyslexia
TL;DR: Dyslexic individuals seem to have an unusual cortical organization of general auditory processing in the time window of speech-sensitive analysis, which is likely to reflect analysis at the phonetic level.
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Spatiotemporal convergence of semantic processing in reading and speech perception.
TL;DR: The present data indicate involvement of the middle superior temporal cortex in semantic processing from ∼300 ms onwards, regardless of input modality.