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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
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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; Nicholas, M.. - : American Medical Association, 1985
Abstract: The contribution of facial, intonational, and speech channels to spontaneous emotional expression was examined in right brain-damaged (RBD), left braindamaged (LBD), and normal control (NC) subjects. Subjects were videotaped while viewing and responding to a series of emotionally laden slides; the videotapes were then rated for the three channels of communication. Overall, RBDs used facial expression and intonation less frequently than the other two groups. When the speech output channel was analyzed, oral expression of feelings in the RBDs, relative to the LBDs and NCs, was less appropriate, more propositional than prosodic, and more descriptive than affective. When the ratings for the three channels of communication were examined, facial expression and intonation were significantly correlated for all subjects.
Keyword: Applied Linguistics and Communication (to 2020)
URL: http://archneur.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/42/4/345
https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/4169/
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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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