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JurnalBrain and Language (Full Text) vol. 95 no. 1 (2005)
Bibliografi
Topik: Linguistics; Psycholinguistics; Brain and Language
Bahasa: (EN )    ISSN: 0093-934X    Year:: 2005    Edisi: Softcopy    
Penerbit: Brain and Language
Jenis: Journal - ilmiah internasional
[Lihat daftar eksemplar jurnal Brain and Language (Full Text)]
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  1. Dynamics of reorganisation in the language system after stroke: An fMRI-follow-up study from the acute to the chronic phase, halaman 8-9
  2. Evidence for altered functional connectivity in a language comprehension task following stroke, halaman 10-11
  3. When lexical selection gets tough, the LIFG gets going: A lesion analysis study of interference during word production, halaman 12-13
  4. Orthographic effects on picture naming in Chinese: A 4T erfMRI study, halaman 14-15
  5. Can Alzheimer’s disease patients learn a novel semantic category by implicit means?, halaman 16-17
  6. The protective effects of behavioral intervention in a case of primary progressive aphasia, halaman 18-19
  7. Generative naming in aphasia during conditions of quiet and cafeteria noise distraction, halaman 20-21
  8. Lexical decision reflects an interaction of word form and meaning: Implications for aphasiology, halaman 22-23
  9. Neighbourhood density effects in auditory nonword processing in aphasia, halaman 24-25
  10. Spared semantic knowledge of manipulable objects but impaired representation of gestures required for their use: A case study, halaman 26-27
  11. Are verbs like inanimate objects?, halaman 28-29
  12. A relative vowel deficit in aphasia sparing the lexicon of numbers, halaman 30-31
  13. Cortical plasticity of language measured by EEG in a case of anomic aphasia, halaman 32-33
  14. Perception of lexical stress differences in LHD and RHD subjects, halaman 34-35
  15. Why verbs could be more demanding of executive resources than nouns: Insight from a case study of a fv-FTD patient, halaman 36-37
  16. The semantic–phonological model and progressive aphasia, halaman 38-39
  17. A direct processing route to translate words from the first to the second language: Evidence from a case of a bilingual aphasic, halaman 40-41
  18. A neurolinguistic analysis of neologisms in reading, halaman 42-43
  19. Lexical effects in verbal STM: Evidences from a phonological output buffer patient, halaman 44-45
  20. Facilitation and interference in phonological blocked-cyclic naming, halaman 46-47
  21. Deficits in naming in context: The role of semantic STM vs. control of word retrieval, halaman 48-49
  22. On-line word recognition of verbs and nouns in a French-speaking individual with non-fluent primary progressive aphasia, halaman 50-51
  23. Access to lexical phonology does not predict retrieval of grammatical gender in Welsh: Implications for theories of language production, halaman 52-53
  24. A cross-language fMRI study of sentence-level prosody in Mandarin, halaman 54-55
  25. Gender differences and the brain representation of semantic knowledge, halaman 56-57
  26. Broca's aphasia and arithmetical disorders in 49,XXXXY syndrome, halaman 58-59
  27. Neural resources recruited to disambiguate sentences with a temporary structural ambiguity: An fMRI study, halaman 62-63
  28. Event-related potentials demonstrate prolonged N400 priming effects for English irregular verbs, halaman 64-65
  29. Noun and verb homophones: Important predictors of picture naming latency and implications for aphasia, halaman 66-67
  30. The neural correlates of imageability in elderly subjects: An event-related fMRI study, halaman 68-69
  31. The basal ganglia are receptive to rhythmic compensation during auditory syntactic processing: ERP patient data, halaman 70-71
  32. Syntactic and semantic influences on BOLD signal responses to comprehension of relative clauses, halaman 72-73
  33. Text comprehension after traumatic brain injury: Missing the gist?, halaman 74-75
  34. Age-dependent evolution of the attentional resources for the phonological and semantic processing of words: Cues in favor of an extension of the HAROLD model to language, halaman 76-77
  35. The neural correlates of imageability and grammatical class in elderly subjects: An event-related fMRI study, halaman 78-79
  36. Effects of task complexity on agrammatic production of tense and agreement inflection in Dutch, halaman 80-81
  37. Perception of functional morphology in agrammatic Broca's aphasia, halaman 82-83
  38. Slow sentence processing in agrammatic Broca's aphasia: Evidence from Dutch reflexive-antecedent dependencies, halaman 84-85
  39. Discourse linking, canonicity, and comprehension of wh-questions in agrammatism, halaman 86-87
  40. The (neuro)-psychology of mass and count nouns, halaman 88-89
  41. The semantic organisation of mass nouns and the representational locus of the mass/count distinction, halaman 90-91
  42. A dissociation between semantic and syntactic processing of mass/count information in Alzheimer's disease, halaman 92-93
  43. A deficit in noun syntax representations in aphasia, halaman 94-95
  44. Dissociating semantics and English count-mass: Evidence from semantic dementia and progressive non-fluent aphasia, halaman 96-97
  45. Mass and count nouns show distinct EEG cortical processes during an explicit semantic task, halaman 98-99
  46. Reperfusion of selective areas is associated with improved naming in acute stroke, halaman 100-101
  47. Using a connectionist model in aphasia therapy for naming disorders, halaman 102-104
  48. Exploring the dynamics of aphasic word production using the picture–word interference task: A case study, halaman 105-106
  49. Investigating the serial order mechanism of spelling: A simple recurrent network simulation of the graphemic buffer, halaman 107-108
  50. Macrostructure revisited: An examination of gist responses in aphasia, halaman 109-110
  51. Comprehension of discourse relations in the right and left cerebral hemispheres, halaman 111-112
  52. Temporal events and reference in aphasia: A comparison of talking and test performance, halaman 113-114
  53. Focus in the left periphery: A cue to agrammatic sentence comprehension?, halaman 115-116
  54. The interpretation of ambiguous dislocations in agrammatism, halaman 117-118
  55. Online comprehension of anaphor and pronoun constructions in Broca's aphasia: Evidence from eyetracking, halaman 119-120
  56. Agrammatic aphasia and aspect, halaman 121-122
  57. Functional category production in agrammatic speech, halaman 123-124
  58. Pronoun interpretation in Dutch Broca’s and Wernicke’s aphasia: A study of VP-ellipsis, halaman 125-126
  59. Syntactic comprehension in agrammatism: A computational model, halaman 127-128
  60. Parallels in the breakdown of CP and DP-internal movement processes in agrammatism: A preliminary case study, halaman 129-130
  61. Impairments of derivational word formation in agrammatic aphasia, halaman 131-132
  62. Subject drop in Italian Alzheimer’s disease, halaman 133-134
  63. Language therapy in fluent primary progressive aphasia—A single case study, halaman 135-136
  64. Naming compounds in aphasia and in Alzheimer's disease, halaman 137-138
  65. No evidence for a rule/procedural deficit in German patients with Parkinson's disease, halaman 139-140
  66. Use of lexical and semantic information as cues to support short-term memory performance in patients with Alzheimer's disease, halaman 141-142
  67. Emotional prosody recognition in BG-patients: Disgust recognition revisited, halaman 143-144
  68. Relative false recollection in dementia, halaman 145-146
  69. Frequency and semantic effects on verb reading in aging and dementia, halaman 147-148
  70. Judging category boundaries: Evidence from semantic dementia, halaman 149-150
  71. How broad is naming difficulty in Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia?, halaman 151-152
  72. Verb learning profiles in aphasic frontotemporal dementia subtypes, halaman 153-154
  73. Quantitative analysis of grammatical deviance in frontotemporal disease, halaman 155-156
  74. Explaining semantic substitutions in the speech of people with Alzheimer’s disease with the two-stage model of lexicalization, halaman 157-158
  75. Clitic production in Italian agrammatism, halaman 159-160
  76. Syntactic movement in Turkish agrammatic production, halaman 161-162
  77. Modality-specific deficits affecting bound and free grammatical elements in written compared to spoken production, halaman 163-164
  78. Communication disorders following stroke: First step toward a new fluency protocol, halaman 165-166
  79. Lexical decision with no iconicity effect in German Sign Language: An fMRI-study, halaman 167-169
  80. Is there a need to control for sublexical frequencies?, halaman 170-171
  81. Differentiating the neural language system: Contrasting the regular and irregular past tense, halaman 172-173
  82. Treating verbal short-term memory deficits by increasing the duration of temporary phonological representations: A case study, halaman 174-175
  83. Model-based treatment of phonetic encoding impairments: Two cases with apraxia of speech, halaman 176-177
  84. Typicality of inanimate category exemplars in aphasia: Further evidence for the semantic complexity effect, halaman 178-180
  85. Facilitation of written sentence production by direct treatment of oral sentence production—A longitudinal case study of a Broca's aphasic, halaman 181-182
  86. Understanding the effects of cuing strategies through error analysis, halaman 183-184
  87. Effects of presentation and recall format on immediate serial recall: A linguistic account, halaman 185-186
  88. Further evidence of age of acquisition and phonological neighbourhood effect on recovery patterns from anomia, halaman 187-188
  89. Is 'time' up for the irregularity of tense in aphasia, in relation to semantics and the temporal lobe?, halaman 189-190
  90. Processing of the mass/count distinction in Alzheimer's disease: Evidence from Polish, halaman 191-192
  91. Selection demands vs. association strength in the verb generation task, halaman 193-194
  92. Using non-verbal tests to measure cognitive ability in patients with aphasia: A comparison of the RCPM and the TONI, halaman 195-196
  93. External validation of the Cantonese linguistic communication measure, halaman 197-199
  94. The effect of multiple productions on the single word production of people with acquired speech sound production difficulties: An analysis of two cases, halaman 200-201
  95. Does training-induced improvement of noncanonical sentence production in agrammatic aphasia generalize to comprehension? A multiple single case study, halaman 202-203
  96. Treatment for pure alexia using a model based approach: Evidence from one acute aphasic individual, halaman 204-206
  97. Self-administered MossTalk Words: A single subject design comparing treatment intensity replicated in three cases, halaman 207-208
  98. Speeded functor reading: A new treatment program for phonological text alexia, halaman 209-210
  99. Differential recovery of aphasia and apraxia of speech in an adolescent after infarction of the left frontal lobe: Longitudinal behavioral and fMRI data, halaman 211-212
  100. Recovery of linguistic deficits in stroke patients: A three-year-follow up, halaman 213-214
  101. Whole-word phonological representations in the Chinese lexicon, halaman 215-216
  102. Acoustic analysis of speech output in Broca's aphasia and Parkinson's disease, halaman 217-218
  103. Right hemisphere contributions to phonological processing, halaman 219-220
  104. Patterns of phoneme and syllable frequency in jargon aphasia, halaman 221-222
  105. Acoustic correlates to idiomatic interpretations in brain-damaged populations, halaman 223-224
  106. Lexical and semantic access in letter-by-letter dyslexia: A case report, halaman 225-226
  107. Different physical similarity principles for lower- and upper-case substitution errors in a case of post-buffer dysgraphia, halaman 227-228
  108. Phonological agraphia: Functional and anatomical correlates of seven cases, halaman 229-230
  109. Discovering surface dysgraphia in writers of shallow languages: The use of loan words, halaman 231-232
  110. Deep dyslexia in Greek: A case study, halaman 233-234
  111. The interaction between semantic and sublexical routes in reading: Converging evidence from Chinese, halaman 235-236
  112. The neural consequences of behavioral intervention in dysgraphia: An fMRI investigation, halaman 237-238
  113. Pure alexia without agraphia after a lesion at the right hemisphere: A case study, halaman 239-240
  114. Bilingual alexia and agraphia: A neurolinguistic study, halaman 241-242
  115. Non-verbal semantic impairment in stroke aphasia: A comparison with semantic dementia, halaman 244-246
  116. Comparing and contrasting patients with refractory access and storage semantic impairments, halaman 247-248
  117. Left inferior frontal involvement in semantic retention during phrase comprehension and production: Evidence from functional neuroimaging, halaman 249-250
  118. Verbal and nonverbal semantic impairments in aphasia: An activation deficit hypothesis, halaman 251-252
  119. Toward an understanding of semantic impairments in aphasia and semantic dementia, halaman 243

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