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Speaking for yourself: the medico-legal aspects of aphasia in nineteenth-century Britain
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24 |
The modern beginnings of research into developmental language disorders
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25 |
The 'idioglossia' cases of the 1890s and the clinical investigation and treatment of developmental language impairment
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26 |
Re-examining Paul Broca’s initial presentation of M. Leborgne: understanding the impetus for brain and language research
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27 |
Commemorating the 3rd epoch of Aphasia research: 50 years since the founding of the Academy of Aphasia
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28 |
"Fools at musick": Thomas Willis (1621-1675) on congenital amusia
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29 |
Darwin’s contribution to the study of child development and language acquisition
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31 |
The emergence of the age variable in 19th-century neurology: considerations of recovery patterns in acquired childhood aphasia
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32 |
Multiple languages, memory, and regression: an examination of Ribot's Law
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33 |
Research in applied linguistics at Birkbeck, university of London
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35 |
The merest logomachy: the 1868 Norwich discussion of aphasia by Hughlings Jackson and Broca
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36 |
Phonemic awareness in Chinese L1 readers of English: not simply an effect of orthography
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37 |
Determining the distinction between language and thought through medico-legal considerations of aphasia in the late 19th Century
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39 |
Language development in a 3-year-old boy with Prader- Willi syndrome
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40 |
Bilingualism and memory: early 19th Century ideas about the significance of Polyglot Aphasia
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