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Hits 81 – 93 of 93

81
Hemiplegic writing with the use of a prosthesis in an Aphasic Agraphic patient
Lorch, Marjorie; Whurr, R.. - : Graz Institut für Sprachwissenschaft, 1991
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82
Cross-linguistic study of the agrammatic impairment in verb inflection: Icelandic, Hindi, and Finnish Cases
Lorch, Marjorie. - : Springer, 1990
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83
Agrammatism and paragrammatism
Lorch, Marjorie. - : Taylor and Francis, 1989
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84
How people listen to languages they don't know
Lorch, Marjorie; Meara, P.. - : Elsevier, 1989
Abstract: This study investigates how people listen to and recognize unknown foreign languages. We examine the ability of subjects to describe, transcribe and identify six foreign languages which have various significance in the sociolinguistic context of greater London: Farsi, Punjabi, Spanish, Indonesian, Arabic and Urdu. Unknown foreign languages represent linguistic stimuli as sound patterns without meaning. As such, they raise a number of interesting questions: What aspects of a linguistic stimuli can be processed in the absence of meaning? Do lay people have an awareness of their linguistic environment? Does passive experience affect language awareness? Our findings indicate that the judgments made by untrained listeners are actually quite complex. Although subjects lacked the vocabulary necessary to accurately describe phonetic features, they did offer reports of segmental, suprasegmental, and other impressionistic details. A strong recency effect was found. Our listeners appeared to use a variety of strategies in attempting to identify the target languages. Subjects did appear to have a “feel” for the language family or geographical area where the target language was spoken. Presumably this arises because of general exposure to foreign languages in the media, and from personal contacts. We discuss some evidence from research on categorical perception and the psychology of music which offers a possible interpretation of these findings.
Keyword: Applied Linguistics and Communication (to 2020)
URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/4162/
https://doi.org/10.1016/0388-0001(89)90025-9
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85
Verb finding in Aphasia
Kohn, S.E.; Lorch, Marjorie; Pearson, D.M.. - : Elsevier, 1989
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86
The true nature of the linguistic trigger
Lorch, Marjorie. - : Cambridge Journals, 1989
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87
Emotional and non-emotional facial behaviour in patients with unilateral brain damage
Borod, J.C.; Koff, E.; Lorch, Marjorie. - : BMJ Publishing, 1988
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88
Effect of emotional context on bucco-facial apraxia
Borod, J.C.; Lorch, Marjorie; Koff, E.. - : Taylor and Francis, 1987
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89
Deficits in facial expression and movement as a function of brain damage
Borod, J.; Koff, E.; Lorch, Marjorie. - : Routledge, 1986
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90
The expression and perception of facial emotion in brain-damaged patients
Barod, J.C.; Koff, E.; Lorch, Marjorie. - : Elsevier, 1986
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91
A non-invasive index of hemispheric activity during cognitive tasks
Swift, A.B.; Lorch, Marjorie. - : Ammons Scientific, 1985
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92
Channels of emotional expression in patients with unilateral brain damage
Borod, J.C.; Koff, E.; Lorch, Marjorie. - : American Medical Association, 1985
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93
On the underlying causes of semantic paralexias in a patient with deep dyslexia
Friedman, R.B.; Lorch, Marjorie. - : Elsevier, 1982
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