Eiling Yee
Associate Professor/Psychological Sciences
Storrs Mansfield
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Scholarly Contributions
82 Scholarly Contributions
The time course of lexical activation in Broca’s aphasia: Evidence from eye movements
2000
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Using eye movements to track the spread of semantic activation during spoken word recognition
2001
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
The time course of lexical activation in Broca's and Wernicke's aphasia: Evidence from eye-movements
2004
Research Type: Journal Article
Neural correlates of lexicon and grammar: evidence from the production, reading and judgment of inflection in aphasia
2005
Research Type: Journal Article
The time course of lexical activation during spoken word recognition: Evidence from unimpaired and aphasic individuals
2005
Research Type: Other Scholarly Work
Eye movements to pictures reveal transient semantic activation during spoken word recognition
2006
Research Type: Journal Article
Does lexical activation flow from word meanings to word sounds during spoken word recognition?
2007
Research Type: Journal Article
Statistical and Computational Investigations of the Time Course of Spoken Word Recognition in Aphasia
2008
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Lexical-semantic activation in Broca's and Wernicke's aphasia: Evidence from eye movements
2008
Research Type: Journal Article
Looking for meaning: Eye movements are sensitive to overlapping semantic features, not association
2009
Research Type: Journal Article
Impaired access to manipulation features in apraxia: Evidence from eyetracking and semantic judgment tasks
2010
Research Type: Journal Article
fMRI-adaptation evidence of overlapping neural representations for objects related in function or manipulation
2010
Research Type: Journal Article
Playing patty-cake while listening to words: A concurrent manual task interferes with comprehending the names of objects that are interacted with manually
2011
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Function follows form: activation of shape and function features during object identification.
2011
Research Type: Journal Article
Theories of spoken word recognition deficits in aphasia: Evidence from eye-tracking and computational modeling
2011
Research Type: Journal Article
Adults show less sensitivity to phonetic detail in unfamiliar words, too
2013
Research Type: Journal Article