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1
The Role of Context and Cognition in Countability: A Psycholinguistic Account of Lexical Distributions ...
Franzon, Francesca; Arcara, Giorgio; Zanini, Chiara. - : Cambridge University Press, 2021
BASE
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2
Pragmatic Language Disorder in Parkinson’s Disease and the Potential Effect of Cognitive Reserve
Montemurro, Sonia; Mondini, Sara; Signorini, Matteo. - : Frontiers Media S.A., 2019
BASE
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3
Morphosyntactic production and WM in aphasia (Fyndanis et al., 2018) ...
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4
Morphosyntactic production and WM in aphasia (Fyndanis et al., 2018) ...
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5
Communication in schizophrenia, between pragmatics, cognition, and social cognition
In: Biolinguistic investigations on the language faculty (Amsterdam, 2016), p. 213-234
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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6
Compound headedness in the mental lexicon: An event-related potential study
In: Cognitive neuropsychology. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 31 (2014) 1, 164-183
OLC Linguistik
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7
Word structure and decomposition effects in reading
In: Cognitive neuropsychology. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 31 (2014) 1, 184-218
OLC Linguistik
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8
Measuring the distribution of mass and count nouns. A comparison between a rating study and a corpus based analysis. ...
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9
Lexical and Buffer Effects in Reading and in Writing Noun-Noun Compound Nouns
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10
Is “Hit and Run” a Single Word? The Processing of Irreversible Binomials in Neglect Dyslexia
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.
Keyword: Psychology
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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11
Lexical access of mass and count nouns : how word recognition times correlate with lexical and morpho-syntactic processing
In: The mental lexicon. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : John Benjamins Publishing Company 4 (2009) 3, 354-379
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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