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Horse or pony? Visual Typicality and Lexical Frequency Affect Variability in Object Naming
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In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2022)
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Phonological processing skills and their longitudinal relation to first and additional language literacy in isiXhosa and isiZulu speaking children ...
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Bihemispheric Navigated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Mapping for Action Naming Compared to Object Naming in Sentence Context
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In: Brain Sciences ; Volume 11 ; Issue 9 (2021)
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“RED” matters when naming “CAR” : the cascading activation of nontarget properties
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In: ISSN: 0278-7393 ; EISSN: 1939-1285 ; Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition ; https://hal-univ-bourgogne.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01426578 ; Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, American Psychological Association, 2016, 42 (3), pp.475 - 488. ⟨10.1037/xlm0000181⟩ (2016)
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"When'' Does Picture Naming Take Longer Than Word Reading?
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In: ISSN: 1664-1078 ; Frontiers in Psychology ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01432278 ; Frontiers in Psychology, Frontiers, 2016, 7, ⟨10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00031⟩ (2016)
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Time-varying effective connectivity during visual object naming as a function of semantic demands
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Cross-cultural evidence for multimodal motherese: Asian Indian mothers' adaptive use of synchronous words and gestures
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In: Department of Psychology (2015)
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Time-varying effective connectivity during visual object naming as a function of semantic demands
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Processing different kinds of semantic relations in picture-word interference with non-masked and masked distractors ...
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Processing different kinds of semantic relations in picture-word interference with non-masked and masked distractors
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Electrophysiological evidence for colour effects on the naming of colour diagnostic and noncolour diagnostic objects
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A perfusion fMRI investigation of thematic and categorical context effects in the spoken production of object names
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СТАНДАРТИЗАЦИЯ ВИЗУАЛЬНЫХ СТИМУЛОВ: ЗАРУБЕЖНЫЙ ОПЫТ И ПЕРСПЕКТИВЫ ИССЛЕДОВАНИЙ
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Action versus animal naming fluency in subcortical dementia, frontal dementias, and Alzheimer's disease
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In: NEUROCASE , 16 (3) 259 - 266. (2010) (2010)
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The treatment of object naming, definition, and object use in semantic dementia: The effectiveness of errorless learning
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In: APHASIOLOGY , 23 (6) 749 - 775. (2009) (2009)
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Noun and verb differences in picture naming: Past studies and new evidence
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In: CORTEX , 45 (6) 738 - 758. (2009) (2009)
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Abstract:
We re-examine the double dissociation view of noun-verb differences by critically reviewing past lesion studies reporting selective noun or verb deficits in picture naming, and reporting the results of a new picture naming study carried out with aphasic patients and comparison participants.Since there are theoretical arguments and empirical evidence that verb processing is more demanding than noun processing, in the review we distinguished between cases that presented with large and small differences between nouns and verbs. We argued that the latter cases may be accounted for in terms of greater difficulty in processing verbs than nouns. For the cases reporting large differences between nouns and verbs we assessed consistency in lesion localization and consistency in diagnostic classification. More variability both in terms of diagnostic category and lesion sites was found among the verb impaired than the noun impaired patients.In the experimental study, nine aphasic patients and nine age matched neurologically unimpaired individuals carried out a picture naming study that used a large set of materials matched for age of acquisition and in addition to accuracy measures, latencies were also recorded. Despite the patients' variable language deficits, diagnostic category and the matched materials, all patients performed faster and more accurately in naming the object than the action pictures. The comparison participants performed similarly. we also carried out a qualitative analysis of the errors patients made and showed that different types of errors were made in response to object and action Pictures. We concluded that action naming places more and different demands on the language processor than object naming.The conclusions of the literature review and the results of the experimental study are discussed in relation to claims previous studies have made on the basis of the double dissociation found between nouns and verbs. we argue that these claims are only justified when it can be shown that the impairments to the two categories occur for the same underlying reason and that the differences between the two categories are large. (c) 2008 Elsevier Srl. All rights reserved.
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Keyword:
ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE; Aphasia; ARGUMENT STRUCTURE; BRAIN-DAMAGED PATIENTS; Double dissociation; GRAMMATICAL CLASS; LANGUAGE PRODUCTION; LEFT FRONTAL-CORTEX; LEXICAL ORGANIZATION; NEURAL REPRESENTATION; Nouns and verbs; Object and action naming; SENTENCE PRODUCTION; WORD-FREQUENCY
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URL: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/91581/
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The Influence of Surface Detail on Object Identification in Alzheimer's Patients and Healthy Participants
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