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A Caramazza

Showing results (11-20 of 111) with videos related to

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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 statesM 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 equivalenceB Gordon, A Caramazza
Cognition|December 1, 1986
A final brief in the case against agrammatism: the role of theory in the selection of dataW Badecker, A Caramazza
Neuropsychologia|November 19, 1997
Haptic processing by the left hemisphere in a split-brain patientM Badan, A Caramazza
Cognition|January 23, 1999
More is not always better: a response to Roelofs, Meyer, and LeveltA Caramazza, M Miozzo
Brain and Language|January 1, 1982
Lexical decision for open- and closed-class words: failure to replicate differential frequency sensitivityB Gordon, A Caramazza
Pageof 12

Showing results (11-20 of 111) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 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 statesM 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 equivalenceB Gordon, A Caramazza
Cognition|December 1, 1986
A final brief in the case against agrammatism: the role of theory in the selection of dataW Badecker, A Caramazza
Neuropsychologia|November 19, 1997
Haptic processing by the left hemisphere in a split-brain patientM Badan, A Caramazza
Cognition|January 23, 1999
More is not always better: a response to Roelofs, Meyer, and LeveltA Caramazza, M Miozzo
Brain and Language|January 1, 1982
Lexical decision for open- and closed-class words: failure to replicate differential frequency sensitivityB Gordon, A Caramazza
Pageof 12