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Brain and Language
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July 1, 1991
Data, statistics, and theory: a comment on Bates, McDonald, MacWhinney, and Applebaum's "A maximum likelihood procedure for the analysis of group and individual data in aphasia research"
A Caramazza
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
|
January 24, 1998
Retrieval of lexical-syntactic features in tip-of-the-tongue states
M Miozzo, A Caramazza
Psychological Review
|
August 15, 2000
An evaluation of a computational model of lexical access: comment on Dell et al. (1997)
W Ruml, A Caramazza
Brain and Language
|
March 20, 2001
Sometimes a noun is just a noun: comments on Bird, Howard, and Franklin (2000)
K Shapiro, A Caramazza
Brain and Language
|
November 13, 2001
Language is more than its parts: a reply to Bird, Howard, and Franklin (2001)
K Shapiro, A Caramazza
Cognition
|
November 1, 1985
Lexical access and frequency sensitivity: frequency saturation and open/closed class equivalence
B Gordon, A Caramazza
Cognition
|
December 1, 1986
A final brief in the case against agrammatism: the role of theory in the selection of data
W Badecker, A Caramazza
Neuropsychologia
|
November 19, 1997
Haptic processing by the left hemisphere in a split-brain patient
M Badan, A Caramazza
Cognition
|
January 23, 1999
More is not always better: a response to Roelofs, Meyer, and Levelt
A Caramazza, M Miozzo
Brain and Language
|
January 1, 1982
Lexical decision for open- and closed-class words: failure to replicate differential frequency sensitivity
B Gordon, A Caramazza
Page
of 12
Search research articles
Search
Showing results (11-20 of 111) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 12
Brain and Language
|
July 1, 1991
Data, statistics, and theory: a comment on Bates, McDonald, MacWhinney, and Applebaum's "A maximum likelihood procedure for the analysis of group and individual data in aphasia research"
A Caramazza
Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
|
January 24, 1998
Retrieval of lexical-syntactic features in tip-of-the-tongue states
M Miozzo, A Caramazza
Psychological Review
|
August 15, 2000
An evaluation of a computational model of lexical access: comment on Dell et al. (1997)
W Ruml, A Caramazza
Brain and Language
|
March 20, 2001
Sometimes a noun is just a noun: comments on Bird, Howard, and Franklin (2000)
K Shapiro, A Caramazza
Brain and Language
|
November 13, 2001
Language is more than its parts: a reply to Bird, Howard, and Franklin (2001)
K Shapiro, A Caramazza
Cognition
|
November 1, 1985
Lexical access and frequency sensitivity: frequency saturation and open/closed class equivalence
B Gordon, A Caramazza
Cognition
|
December 1, 1986
A final brief in the case against agrammatism: the role of theory in the selection of data
W Badecker, A Caramazza
Neuropsychologia
|
November 19, 1997
Haptic processing by the left hemisphere in a split-brain patient
M Badan, A Caramazza
Cognition
|
January 23, 1999
More is not always better: a response to Roelofs, Meyer, and Levelt
A Caramazza, M Miozzo
Brain and Language
|
January 1, 1982
Lexical decision for open- and closed-class words: failure to replicate differential frequency sensitivity
B Gordon, A Caramazza
Page
of 12