Words and things : cognitive neuropsychological studies in tribute to Eleanor M. Safftan
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Words and things : cognitive neuropsychological studies in tribute to Eleanor M. Safftan
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Physical Description |
sivut 99-462 : kuvitettu |
---|---|
Language |
English |
Language of Original Work |
English |
Item Description |
Special issue of the journal Cognitive neuropsychology, issues 2, 3, and 4 of vol. 21 (2004). |
Publisher |
Hove :
Psychology Press,
2004.
|
Series | Special issue of Cognitive neuropsychology |
Subjects | |
Additional Information | edited by Marlene Behrmann and Karalyn Patterson |
ISBN |
1-84169-964-0 kovakantinen |
Uncontrolled Title |
Cognitive neuropsychology : special issue The noun/verb dissociation in language production : varieties of causes Models of errors of omission in aphasic naming Evidence for the involvement of a nonlexical route in the repetition of familiar words : a comparison of single and dual route models of auditory repetition Origins of nonword phonological errors in aphasic picture naming "Phonological" dysphasia: a cross-modal phonological impairment affecting repetition, production, and comprehension Exploring the relationship between word processing and verbal short-term memory : evidence from associations and dissociations Comprehension of reversible sentences in aphasia : the effects of verb meaning Semantic relatedness effects in conjoined noun phrase production : implications for the role of short-term memory The role of processing support in the remediation of aphasic language production disorders Representations of the human body in the production and imitation of complex movements A circumscribed refractory access disorder : a verbal semantic impairment sparing visual semantics Sentence comprehension in semantic dementia : a longitudinal case study Natural selection : the impact of semantic impairment on lexical and object decision Temporally graded semantic memory loss in Alzheimer's Disease : cross-sectional and longitudinal studies Lexical influences in graphemic buffer disorder Implicit recognition in pure alexia : the Saffran effect : a tale of two systems or two procedures? Object identification in simultanagnosia : when wholes are not the sum of their parts Pure alexia and covert reading : evidence from Stroop tasks |