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Derivational morphology in agrammatic aphasia ... : a comparison between prefixed and suffixed words ...
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Numerical abilities of individuals with aphasia and healthy controls in verbal and non-verbal activities of daily living ...
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Derivational Morphology in Agrammatic Aphasia: A Comparison Between Prefixed and Suffixed Words
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In: Front Psychol (2020)
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Gender processing in Spanish patients with aphasia. A case study on gender priming and semantic gender. ...
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When verbs help naming nouns:A study on derived nominals in aphasia
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Lexical and Buffer Effects in Reading and in Writing Noun-Noun Compound Nouns
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Is “Hit and Run” a Single Word? The Processing of Irreversible Binomials in Neglect Dyslexia
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Abstract:
The present study is the first neuropsychological investigation into the problem of the mental representation and processing of irreversible binomials (IBs), i.e., word pairs linked by a conjunction (e.g., “hit and run,” “dead or alive”). In order to test their lexical status, the phenomenon of neglect dyslexia is explored. People with left-sided neglect dyslexia show a clear lexical effect: they can read IBs better (i.e., by dropping the leftmost words less frequently) when their components are presented in their correct order. This may be taken as an indication that they treat these constructions as lexical, not decomposable, elements. This finding therefore constitutes strong evidence that IBs tend to be stored in the mental lexicon as a whole and that this whole form is preferably addressed in the retrieval process.
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Keyword:
Psychology
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22347199 https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00011 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3271349
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The Syntactic and Semantic Processing of Mass and Count Nouns: An ERP Study
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Language-specific effects in Alzheimer's disease : subject omission in Italian and English
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