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Original Articles

Idiosyncratic word associations following right hemisphere damage

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Pages 703-710 | Accepted 15 Nov 1990, Published online: 04 Jan 2008

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (2)

Rachel Wolf, Diana Van Lancker Sidtis & John J. Sidtis. (2014) The ear craves the familiar: Pragmatic repetition in left and right cerebral damage. Aphasiology 28:5, pages 596-615.
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Diana Van Lancker Sidtis & Whitney Anne Postman. (2006) Formulaic expressions in spontaneous speech of left‐ and right‐hemisphere‐damaged subjects. Aphasiology 20:5, pages 411-426.
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Articles from other publishers (6)

Thomas Merten. (2002) Die Anwendung des Wortassoziationstests in der Gedächtnisdiagnostik bei älteren Patienten. Zeitschrift für Gerontopsychologie & -psychiatrie 15:1, pages 1-12.
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Laura L. Murray. (2000) The Effects of Varying Attentional Demands on the Word Retrieval Skills of Adults with Aphasia, Right Hemisphere Brain Damage, or No Brain Damage. Brain and Language 72:1, pages 40-72.
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Carol L. Leonard, Gloria S. Waters & David Caplan. (1997) The Use of Contextual Information by Right Brain-Damaged Individuals in the Resolution of Ambiguous Pronouns. Brain and Language 57:3, pages 309-342.
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Yalchin G. Abdullaev & Michael I. Posner. (2016) Time Course of Activating Brain Areas in Generating Verbal Associations. Psychological Science 8:1, pages 56-59.
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Barry Gordon. 1997. Anomia. Anomia 31 64 .
M.J. Pijpers-Kooiman, E.A. van der Velde & A. Jennekens-Schinkel. (1995) Retrieval from semantic memory may be normal in multiple sclerosis patients: a study of free word association. Journal of the Neurological Sciences 132:1, pages 65-70.
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