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Xiaoming Jiang

Researcher at Tongji University

Publications -  56
Citations -  936

Xiaoming Jiang is an academic researcher from Tongji University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sentence & Prosody. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 44 publications receiving 658 citations. Previous affiliations of Xiaoming Jiang include Shanghai International Studies University & McGill University.

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A microneedle electrode array on flexible substrate for long-term EEG monitoring

TL;DR: In this article, a flexible parylene-based MNEA (P-MNEA) with silicon microneedles was developed, which could provide not only conformal but also robust contact.
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The sound of confidence and doubt

TL;DR: These findings provide new information on how metacognitive states such as confidence and doubt are communicated by vocal and linguistic cues which permit listeners to arrive at graded impressions of a speaker's feeling of (un)knowing.
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Semantic integration processes at different levels of syntactic hierarchy during sentence comprehension: An ERP study

TL;DR: The pattern of the N400 effects suggests that semantic processes at different levels of syntactic hierarchy interact in integrating the incoming word into the prior sentence context with neither process overriding the other.
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Distinct neural correlates for pragmatic and semantic meaning processing: An event-related potential investigation of scalar implicature processing using picture-sentence verification

TL;DR: The present study examines the brain-level representation and composition of meaning in scalar quantifiers, which have both a semantic meaning (at least one) and a pragmatic meaning (not all), to suggest that inferential pragmatic aspects of meaning are processed using different mechanisms than lexical or combinatorial semantic aspects of mean.
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On how the brain decodes vocal cues about speaker confidence.

TL;DR: This work used event-related potentials (ERPs) to examine the temporal neural dynamics underlying a listener's ability to infer speaker confidence from vocal cues during speech processing, and provides the first piece of evidence of how quickly the brain responds to vocal cues signifying the extent of a speaker's confidence during online speech comprehension.