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1
Linguistic recycling in typical and atypical interaction
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 28 (2014) 7, 590-601
OLC Linguistik
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2
Idiosyncratic gesture use in atypical language development, and its interaction with speech rhythm, word juncture, syntax, pragmatics and discourse: a case study
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 26 (2012) 10, 882-907
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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3
Clinical pragmatics
In: Pragmatics in practice (Amsterdam, 2011), p. 66-92
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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4
Clinical linguistics: its past, present and future
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 25 (2011) 11-12, 922-927
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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5
The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics
Ball, Martin J. [Herausgeber]; Perkins, Michael R. [Herausgeber]; Müller, Nicole [Herausgeber]. - New York, NY : Wiley, J, 2010
DNB Subject Category Language
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6
Pragmatic impairment
Perkins, Michael R.. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 2010
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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7
The scope of pragmatic disability : a cognitive approach
In: Clinical linguistics ; 1. Foundations of clinical linguistics. - London [u.a.] : Routledge (2010), 247-266
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8
Pragmatic impairment
In: The handbook of language and speech disorders. - Malden, Mass : Wiley-Blackwell (2010), 227-246
BLLDB
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9
The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics
Perkins, Michael R. Herausgeber]. - New York, NY : John Wiley & Sons, 2009
DNB Subject Category Language
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10
Pragmatic impairment as an emergent phenomenon
In: The handbook of clinical linguistics (Oxford, 2008), p. 79-91
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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11
Pragmatic impairment as an emergent phenomenon
In: The handbook of clinical linguistics. - Malden, Mass. [u.a.] : Blackwell (2008), 79-91
BLLDB
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12
The handbook of clinical linguistics
Ball, Martin J. (Hrsg.); Howard, Sara (Hrsg.); Perkins, Michael R. (Hrsg.). - Malden, Mass. [u.a.] : Blackwell, 2008
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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13
The handbook of clinical linguistics
Ball, Martin J. (Hrsg.); Howard, Sara (Hrsg.); Müller, Nicole (Hrsg.). - Malden : Blackwell, 2008
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
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14
Chomskyan Syntactic Theory and Language Disorders
Clahsen, Harald. - : Blackwell, 2008
BASE
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15
Pragmtaic impairment
Perkins, Michael R.. - : Cambridge University Press, 2007
IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung
16
Conversational success in Williams syndrome: communication in the face of cognitive and linguistic limitations
In: Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics 20 (2006) 7-8, 583-590
IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung
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17
Conversational success in Williams syndrome : communication in the face of cognitive and linguistic limitations
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 20 (2006) 7-8, 583-590
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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18
Lexical knowledge and lexical use in autism
Perkins, Michael R.; Dobbinson, Sushie; Boucher, Jill. - : Springer New York LLC, 2006
BASE
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19
Clinical pragmatics : an emergenist perspective
Perkins, Michael R. (Hrsg.); Body, Richard (Mitarb.); Parker, Mark (Mitarb.)...
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 19 (2005) 5, 363-451
BLLDB
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20
Editorial. Clinical pragmatics: an emergentist perspective
Perkins, Michael R. - : Taylor and Francis, 2005
Abstract: [First Paragraph] Clinical pragmatics has been a major growth area in clinical linguistics and speech and language pathology over the past two decades. Its scope is vast: if we define pragmatics in broad terms, there are no communicative disorders which do not involve pragmatic impairment at least to some degree (Perkins, 2003). Early work in the area tended to focus on the application of pragmatic theory in the analysis of pragmatic impairment (e.g. speech act theory (Hirst, LeDoux, & Stein, 1984), conversational implicature (Damico, 1985) and, more recently, relevance theory (Leinonen & Kerbel, 1999)) and on the development of pragmatic assessments, tests and profiles which included a theoretically eclectic range of items drawn from both pragmatic theory and elsewhere (e.g. Bishop, 1998; Penn, 1985; Prutting & Kirchner, 1983). In more recent years there has been an increasing interest in the neurological and cognitive bases of pragmatic impairment (e.g. Paradis, 1998; Perkins, 2000; Stemmer, 1999) and in the use of interactional approaches such as conversation analysis (e.g. Goodwin, 2003). This special issue of Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics draws on all of these areas but focuses on a particular aspect of pragmatic impairment which has often been overlooked – namely, that the behaviours we describe as pragmatic impairments are in fact the outcome of very varied and highly complex processes. This neglect is partly due to a common tendency to see pragmatics as a separate ‘level’ or even ‘module’ of language, on a par with syntax and semantics. Influenced on the one hand by speech act theory, with its distinction between language structure and communicative acts, and on the other hand by clinical populations who were either able to communicate well despite being linguistically impaired or else were poor communicators despite having good linguistic ability, clinicians assumed there to be a clear dissociation between linguistic and pragmatic competence. Although there is still considerable neurological evidence for a broadly modular view in terms of the lateralisation of linguistic and pragmatic functions, there is also compelling evidence for seeing pragmatic impairment as a more complex, non-unitary phenomenon. Non-modular, or ‘interactional’, views of pragmatic impairment have been influenced by connectionist and functional models of linguistic and cognitive processing (e.g. Bates, Thal, & MacWhinney, 1991), by a growing awareness of the role played in pragmatics by cognitive capacities such as inference, theory of mind and executive function (Martin & McDonald, 2003), and by approaches such as Conversation Analysis (e.g. Damico, Oelschlaeger, & Simmons-Mackie, 1999) which focus on those features of pragmatics which can only be accounted for in terms of interpersonal, collaborative activity. All of these interactional approaches share a view of pragmatic impairment as ‘emergent’, or ‘epiphenomenal’ (Perkins, 1998), rather than as a stand-alone, monadic entity.
URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/02699200400027080
http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/1124/
http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/1124/1/Perkins_2005a.pdf
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