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PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Journal Abstract Search


127 related items for PubMed ID: 2137187

  • 1. Aphasic subjects' comprehension of synthetic and natural speech.
    Huntress LM, Lee L, Creaghead NA, Wheeler DD, Braverman KM.
    J Speech Hear Disord; 1990 Feb; 55(1):21-7. PubMed ID: 2137187
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  • 2. Effects of rate of speech and linguistic stress on auditory paragraph comprehension of aphasic individuals.
    Pashek GV, Brookshire RH.
    J Speech Hear Res; 1982 Sep; 25(3):377-83. PubMed ID: 7176610
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  • 3. Comprehension of main ideas and details in coherent and noncoherent discourse by aphasic and nonaphasic listeners.
    Wegner ML, Brookshire RH, Nicholas LE.
    Brain Lang; 1984 Jan; 21(1):37-51. PubMed ID: 6697170
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  • 4. Comprehension of directly and indirectly stated main ideas and details in discourse by brain-damaged and non-brain-damaged listeners.
    Brookshire RH, Nicholas LE.
    Brain Lang; 1984 Jan; 21(1):21-36. PubMed ID: 6199076
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  • 6. Consistency of the effects of rate of speech on brain-damaged adults' comprehension of narrative discourse.
    Nicholas LE, Brookshire RH.
    J Speech Hear Res; 1986 Dec; 29(4):462-70. PubMed ID: 3795888
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  • 7. Consistency of effects of slow rate and pauses on aphasic listeners' comprehension of spoken sentences.
    Brookshire RH, Nicholas LE.
    J Speech Hear Res; 1984 Sep; 27(3):323-8. PubMed ID: 6482400
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  • 8. Comprehension of synthetic speech and digitized natural speech by adults with aphasia.
    Hux K, Knollman-Porter K, Brown J, Wallace SE.
    J Commun Disord; 2017 Sep; 69():15-26. PubMed ID: 28704689
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  • 11. Perception of co-speech gestures in aphasic patients: a visual exploration study during the observation of dyadic conversations.
    Preisig BC, Eggenberger N, Zito G, Vanbellingen T, Schumacher R, Hopfner S, Nyffeler T, Gutbrod K, Annoni JM, Bohlhalter S, Müri RM.
    Cortex; 2015 Mar; 64():157-68. PubMed ID: 25461716
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  • 12. Effects of thematic structure on syntactic comprehension in aphasia.
    Cannito MP, Jarecki JM, Pierce RS.
    Brain Lang; 1986 Jan; 27(1):38-49. PubMed ID: 2418909
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  • 13. Prosody, linguistic demands, and auditory comprehension in aphasia.
    Kimelman MD.
    Brain Lang; 1999 Sep; 69(2):212-21. PubMed ID: 10447991
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  • 15. The semantic deficit in aphasia: the relationship between semantic errors in auditory comprehension and picture naming.
    Butterworth B, Howard D, Mcloughlin P.
    Neuropsychologia; 1984 Sep; 22(4):409-26. PubMed ID: 6207456
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  • 19. Segmental intelligibility of synthetic speech produced by rule.
    Logan JS, Greene BG, Pisoni DB.
    J Acoust Soc Am; 1989 Aug; 86(2):566-81. PubMed ID: 2527884
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