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1:00-1:50 pm @Metaphor
1: Activation and inhibition of semantic features in metaphor comprehension:
Evidence for asymmetry between topic and vehicle
Keiko Nakamoto (Kyoto Univ. post doctorial researcher)
2: The effect of familiarity on semantic activation in metaphor comprehension
Tomohiro Taira (Kyoto Univ. Graduate student)
Comments
Morton Ann Gernsbacher
2:00-2:50 pm@@Story
3: The effect of a protagonistfs emotional shift on situation model construction
Hidetsugu Komeda (Kyoto Univ. Graduate student)
4: The effect of autobiographical memory on story comprehension
Kouhei Tsunemi (Kyoto Univ. graduate student)
Comments
Morton Ann Gernsbacher
2:50-3:15 pm@@@Discussion
GernsbacherζΆuο
3:30-5:00 pm
TITLE: "Watching the Brain Comprehend Language"
Morton Ann Gernsbacher (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
ABSTRACT: In this talk I shall present the results of several experiments designed to watch the brain at work. The work performed by the brain in these experiments was comprehending language - specifically written, spoken, and pictorial narratives. In addition to exploring the neural bases underlying the process I call "mapping" (or integration) and the mechanism I call "suppression," these experiments illustrate general principles involved in brain imaging research.
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