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Your search keyword '"Pugh, Kenneth R."' showing total 77 results

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77 results on '"Pugh, Kenneth R."'

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1. The reading-attention relationship: Variations in working memory network activity during single word decoding in children with and without dyslexia.

2. Will you read how I will read? Naturalistic fMRI predictors of emergent reading.

3. Inter-subject correlation during long narratives reveals widespread neural correlates of reading ability.

4. Properties of white matter tract diffusivity in children with developmental dyslexia and comorbid attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

5. Researcher-practitioner partnerships and in-school laboratories facilitate translational research in reading.

6. How you read affects what you gain: Individual differences in the functional organization of the reading system predict intervention gains in children with reading disabilities.

7. Theory-driven classification of reading difficulties from fMRI data using Bayesian latent-mixture models.

8. Tracking second language immersion across time: Evidence from a bi-directional longitudinal cross-linguistic fMRI study.

9. The Haskins pediatric atlas: a magnetic-resonance-imaging-based pediatric template and atlas.

11. Is that a pibu or a pibo? Children with reading and language deficits show difficulties in learning and overnight consolidation of phonologically similar pseudowords.

12. Functional connectivity in the developing language network in 4-year-old children predicts future reading ability.

13. From BDNF to reading: Neural activation and phonological processing as multiple mediators.

14. Individual differences in learning the regularities between orthography, phonology and semantics predict early reading skills.

15. Thalamus is a common locus of reading, arithmetic, and IQ: Analysis of local intrinsic functional properties.

16. Gray Matter Structure Is Associated with Reading Skill in Typically Developing Young Readers.

17. Reading Acquisition in Children: Developmental Processes and Dyslexia-Specific Effects.

18. Strength of resting state functional connectivity and local GABA concentrations predict oral reading of real and pseudo-words.

19. Examining individual differences in reading and attentional control networks utilizing an oddball fMRI task.

20. Individual differences in subphonemic sensitivity and phonological skills.

21. Common variation within the SETBP1 gene is associated with reading-related skills and patterns of functional neural activation.

22. Neurobiological signatures of L2 proficiency: Evidence from a bi-directional cross-linguistic study.

23. Development and Prediction of Context-Dependent Vowel Pronunciation in Elementary Readers.

24. Common neural basis of motor sequence learning and word recognition and its relation with individual differences in reading skill.

25. Neurochemistry Predicts Convergence of Written and Spoken Language: A Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Study of Cross-Modal Language Integration.

26. Classifying the mental representation of word meaning in children with Multivariate Pattern Analysis of fNIRS.

27. Individual Differences in Reading Skill Are Related to Trial-by-Trial Neural Activation Variability in the Reading Network.

28. Neural representations for newly learned words are modulated by overnight consolidation, reading skill, and age.

29. Prereader to beginning reader: changes induced by reading acquisition in print and speech brain networks.

30. Cortical Responses to Chinese Phonemes in Preschoolers Predict Their Literacy Skills at School Age.

33. The BDNF Val 66 Met polymorphism is associated with structural neuroanatomical differences in young children.

34. Neural Noise Hypothesis of Developmental Dyslexia.

35. The real-time prediction and inhibition of linguistic outcomes: Effects of language and literacy skill.

36. Dough, tough, cough, rough: A "fast" fMRI localizer of component processes in reading.

37. The BDNF Val66Met Polymorphism Influences Reading Ability and Patterns of Neural Activation in Children.

38. Neural basis of phonological awareness in beginning readers with familial risk of dyslexia-Results from shallow orthography.

39. Functionally integrated neural processing of linguistic and talker information: An event-related fMRI and ERP study.

40. Print-Speech Convergence Predicts Future Reading Outcomes in Early Readers.

41. Universal brain signature of proficient reading: Evidence from four contrasting languages.

42. Neural correlates of language and non-language visuospatial processing in adolescents with reading disability.

43. Neural division of labor in reading is constrained by culture: a training study of reading Chinese characters.

44. Glutamate and choline levels predict individual differences in reading ability in emergent readers.

45. Structural brain differences in school-age children with residual speech sound errors.

46. The relationship between phonological and auditory processing and brain organization in beginning readers.

47. Neurobiological bases of reading comprehension: Insights from neuroimaging studies of word level and text level processing in skilled and impaired readers.

48. The COMT Val/Met polymorphism is associated with reading-related skills and consistent patterns of functional neural activation.

49. Not all reading disabilities are dyslexia: distinct neurobiology of specific comprehension deficits.

50. Searching for Potocki-Lupski syndrome phenotype: a patient with language impairment and no autism.

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