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Journal Abstract Search


104 related items for PubMed ID: 7379567

  • 41. Optic aphasia with pure alexia: a mild form of visual associative agnosia? A case study.
    Chanoine V, Ferreira CT, Demonet JF, Nespoulous JL, Poncet M.
    Cortex; 1998 Jun; 34(3):437-48. PubMed ID: 9669108
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  • 43. Correlation between disturbances of higher cerebral functions in patients with local brain lesions in different situations.
    Khrakovskaya MG.
    Hum Physiol; 1980 Jun; 6(3):187-94. PubMed ID: 7250978
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  • 45. [Recognition of facial and intonational emotional cues by patients with lesions of the speech zone of the cerebral cortex].
    Sidorova OA.
    Zh Vyssh Nerv Deiat Im I P Pavlova; 1979 Jun; 29(4):840-3. PubMed ID: 90437
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  • 48. The effect of sentence boundaries upon aphasic patients' immediate memory for connected speech.
    Ostergaard AL.
    Cortex; 1984 Dec; 20(4):591-7. PubMed ID: 6518800
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  • 49. Activation of the phonological lexicon for reading and object naming in deep dyslexia.
    Katz RB, Lanzoni SM.
    Brain Lang; 1997 Jun 01; 58(1):46-60. PubMed ID: 9184094
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  • 50. Computational dissociation of two vocabulary types: evidence from aphasia.
    Friederici AD, Schoenle PW.
    Neuropsychologia; 1980 Jun 01; 18(1):11-20. PubMed ID: 7366818
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  • 51. The grammatical properties of mass nouns: an aphasia case study.
    Semenza C, Mondini S, Cappelletti M.
    Neuropsychologia; 1997 May 01; 35(5):669-75. PubMed ID: 9153029
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  • 53. Slowly progressive aphasia associated with surface dyslexia.
    Chiacchio L, Grossi D, Stanzione M, Trojano L.
    Cortex; 1993 Mar 01; 29(1):145-52. PubMed ID: 7682490
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  • 54. Words created by children versus aphasic adults: an analysis of their form and communicative effectiveness.
    Liederman J, Kohn S, Wolf M.
    J Genet Psychol; 1986 Sep 01; 147(3):379-93. PubMed ID: 2430052
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  • 55. A central processor for hierarchically-structured material: evidence from Broca's aphasia.
    Grossman M.
    Neuropsychologia; 1980 Sep 01; 18(3):299-308. PubMed ID: 7413063
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  • 56. Feature-processing deficits following brain injury. I. Overselectivity in recognition memory for compound stimuli.
    Wayland S, Taplin JE.
    Brain Cogn; 1985 Jul 01; 4(3):338-55. PubMed ID: 4027066
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  • 59. The relationship of the acquisition of manual signs to severity of aphasia: a training study.
    Coelho CA, Duffy RJ.
    Brain Lang; 1987 Jul 01; 31(2):328-45. PubMed ID: 3620906
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