HIGHLIGHTS
- who: BioMed Central and collaborators from the , Caen , France and Laboratoire Psychologie et Neurosciences de la Cognition (EA1780), University of Rouen, rue have published the paper: Bio Med Central, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: Because of the goal of the study, the authors focused on the N170 component. As in the present study, they obtained a larger activation for repeated word stems in comparison to new word stems.
- how: A supplementary analysis was conducted to assess font alternation effects.
- future: One of the major questions that further studies would have to . . .
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