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Effect of lexical accessibility on syntactic production in aphasia: An eyetracking study
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In: Aphasiology (2019)
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Aligning sentence structures in dialogue: evidence from aphasia
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Priming sentence comprehension in aphasia: Effects of lexically independent and specific structural priming
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Priming Sentence Comprehension in Older Adults
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In: Theses and Dissertations Available from ProQuest (2018)
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Agrammatic Aphasia and Healthy Speakers (Lee et al., 2015) ...
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Agrammatic Aphasia and Healthy Speakers (Lee et al., 2015) ...
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Exploring Korean students’ orientations to English during their study at a UK university
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Production and Comprehension of Time Reference in Korean Nonfluent Aphasia
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Syntactic and morphosyntactic processing in stroke–induced and primary progressive aphasia
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Verbal morphology in agrammatic and anomic aphasia: comparison of structured vs. narrative elicitation tasks
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Learning a novel phonological contrast depends on interactions between individual differences and training paradigm design
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Real-time production of arguments and adjuncts in normal and agrammatic speakers
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Time reference in agrammatic aphasia: A cross-linguistic study
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Noun and verb naming: Phonological facilitation effects on naming latencies and viewing times in agrammatic vs. anomic aphasia
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Abstract:
Phonological facilitation effects during noun and verb naming were examined in groups of agrammatic and anomic aphasic individuals and healthy controls. Phonologically related vs. unrelated auditory primes were presented simultaneously with target pictures to be named while naming latencies and eye-fixations (viewing times) were measured. Controls showed reduced naming latencies and viewing times following phonologically related, compared to unrelated, primes for both nouns and verbs. Agrammatic participants showed phonological facilitation for verb, but not noun naming; whereas, anomic participants showed the opposite pattern, suggesting phonological facilitation effects interact with differential lexical deficits in aphasia.
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URL: http://aphasiology.pitt.edu/2260/1/65-89-1-RV-Jiyeon_Lee.pdf
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Real-time production of unaccusative vs. unergative sentences in normal and agrammatic speakers: an eyetracking study
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