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Original Articles

Abstract word anomia

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Pages 549-566 | Received 29 Apr 1993, Published online: 16 Aug 2007

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Read on this site (31)

Lucy Dyson, Jane Morgan & Ruth Herbert. (2022) Novel matched stimuli for assessment of lexical semantics. Aphasiology 36:7, pages 831-853.
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Lyndsey Nickels, Leonie F. Lampe, Catherine Mason & Solène Hameau. (2022) Investigating the influence of semantic factors on word retrieval: Reservations, results and recommendations. Cognitive Neuropsychology 39:3-4, pages 113-154.
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Catherine Mason & Lyndsey Nickels. (2022) Are single-word picture naming assessments a valid measure of word retrieval in connected speech?. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 24:1, pages 97-109.
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Guy Dove. (2020) More than a scaffold: Language is a neuroenhancement. Cognitive Neuropsychology 37:5-6, pages 288-311.
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Jelena Kuvač Kraljević, Ana Matić & Karolina Lice. (2020) Putting the CAT-HR out: key properties and specificities. Aphasiology 34:7, pages 820-839.
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Kati Renvall & Lyndsey Nickels. (2019) Using treatment to improve the production of emotive adjectives in aphasia: a single-case study. Aphasiology 33:11, pages 1348-1371.
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Roelien Bastiaanse, Martijn Wieling & Nienke Wolthuis. (2016) The role of frequency in the retrieval of nouns and verbs in aphasia. Aphasiology 30:11, pages 1221-1239.
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Naomi Hashimoto, Brooke Widman, Swathi Kiran & Meredith A. Richards. (2013) A comparison of features and categorical cues to improve naming abilities in aphasia. Aphasiology 27:10, pages 1252-1279.
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Naomi Hashimoto. (2012) The use of semantic- and phonological-based feature approaches to treat naming deficits in aphasia. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 26:6, pages 518-553.
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Naomi Hashimoto & CynthiaK. Thompson. (2010) The use of the picture–word interference paradigm to examine naming abilities in aphasic individuals. Aphasiology 24:5, pages 580-611.
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Jane Marshall. (2009) Framing ideas in aphasia: the need for thinking therapy. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 44:1, pages 1-14.
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Brendan S. Weekes & Ilhan Raman. (2008) Bilingual deep dysphasia. Cognitive Neuropsychology 25:3, pages 411-436.
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Yanchao Bi, Zaizhu Han, Hua Shu & Alfonso Caramazza. (2007) Nouns, verbs, objects, actions, and the animate/inanimate effect. Cognitive Neuropsychology 24:5, pages 485-504.
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Natividad Hernández-Muñoz, Cristina Izura & AndrewW. Ellis. (2006) Cognitive aspects of lexical availability. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 18:5, pages 730-755.
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David Howard & Claire Gatehouse. (2006) Distinguishing semantic and lexical word retrieval deficits in people with aphasia. Aphasiology 20:9, pages 921-950.
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Brenda Rapp & Matthew Goldrick. (2006) Speaking words: Contributions of cognitive neuropsychological research. Cognitive Neuropsychology 23:1, pages 39-73.
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CarolynE. Wilshire & CarolineA. Fisher. (2004) “PHONOLOGICAL” DYSPHASIA: A CROSS-MODAL PHONOLOGICAL IMPAIRMENT AFFECTING REPETITION, PRODUCTION, AND COMPREHENSION. Cognitive Neuropsychology 21:2-4, pages 187-210.
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J. Richard Hanley, GaryS. Dell, Janice Kay & Rachel Baron. (2004) Evidence for the involvement of a nonlexical route in the repetition of familiar words: A comparison of single and dual route models of auditory repetition. Cognitive Neuropsychology 21:2-4, pages 147-158.
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Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi & Emmanuel Dupoux. (2003) AN INFLUENCE OF SYNTACTIC AND SEMANTIC VARIABLES ON WORD FORM RETRIEVAL. Cognitive Neuropsychology 20:2, pages 163-188.
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KIYOSHI YASUDA, BOBBIE BECKMANN & TETSUO NAKAMURA. (2000) Brain processing of proper names. Aphasiology 14:11, pages 1067-1089.
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Brendan Weekes. (2000) Oral reading in Chinese: evidence from dementia of the Alzheimer's type. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 35:4, pages 543-559.
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Brendan Weekes & Hui Qin Chen. (1999) Surface dyslexia in chinese. Neurocase 5:2, pages 161-172.
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J. Richard Hanley Janice Kay. (1997) An Effect of Imageability on the Production of Phonological Errors in Auditory Repetition. Cognitive Neuropsychology 14:8, pages 1065-1084.
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HansJ. Markowitsch. (1996) Organic and psychogenic retrograde amnesia: Two sides of the same coin?. Neurocase 2:4, pages 357-371.
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MatthewA. Lambon Ralph, AndrewW. Ellis & Sue Franklin. (1995) Semantic loss without surface dyslexia. Neurocase 1:4, pages 363-369.
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Deepak Puttanna, Sathyapal Puri Goswami & Akshaya Swamy. (2023) Analysis of Errors Following SCVTr Treatment: An Indicator for Improved Lexical Retrieval Abilities in Persons with Aphasia. Clinical Archives of Communication Disorders 8:3, pages 174-181.
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Lyndsey Nickels, Simon Fischer-Baum & Wendy Best. (2022) Single case studies are a powerful tool for developing, testing and extending theories. Nature Reviews Psychology 1:12, pages 733-747.
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Guy Dove, Laura Barca, Luca Tummolini & Anna M. Borghi. (2020) Words have a weight: language as a source of inner grounding and flexibility in abstract concepts. Psychological Research 86:8, pages 2451-2467.
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Mehdi Bakhtiar, Reyhane Jafary & Brendan S. Weekes. (2016) Aphasia in Persian: Implications for cognitive models of lexical processing. Journal of Neuropsychology 11:3, pages 414-435.
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Silvia Primativo, Jamie Reilly & Sebastian J Crutch. (2016) Abstract Conceptual Feature Ratings Predict Gaze Within Written Word Arrays: Evidence From a Visual Wor(l)d Paradigm. Cognitive Science 41:3, pages 659-685.
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Maria Luisa Lorusso, Michele Burigo, Alessandro Tavano, Anna Milani, Sara Martelli, Renato Borgatti & Massimo Molteni. (2017) Learning and Using Abstract Words: Evidence from Clinical Populations. BioMed Research International 2017, pages 1-8.
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Richard J. Binney, Bonnie Zuckerman & Jamie Reilly. (2016) A Neuropsychological Perspective on Abstract Word Representation: From Theory to Treatment of Acquired Language Disorders. Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports 16:9.
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Guy Dove. (2015) Three symbol ungrounding problems: Abstract concepts and the future of embodied cognition. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 23:4, pages 1109-1121.
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Uttam Kumar. (2015) Neural dichotomy of word concreteness: a view from functional neuroimaging. Cognitive Processing 17:1, pages 39-48.
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Joël Macoir, Robert LaforceJr.Jr., Mélanie Brisson & Maximiliano A. Wilson. (2015) Preservation of lexical-semantic knowledge of adjectives in the semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia: Implications for theoretical models of semantic memory. Journal of Neurolinguistics 34, pages 1-14.
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Guy Dove. (2014) Thinking in Words: Language as an Embodied Medium of Thought. Topics in Cognitive Science 6:3, pages 371-389.
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Joshua Troche, Sebastian Crutch & Jamie Reilly. (2014) Clustering, hierarchical organization, and the topography of abstract and concrete nouns. Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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Julia Galliers, Stephanie Wilson, Abi Roper, Naomi Cocks, Jane Marshall, Sam Muscroft & Tim Pring. (2012) Words are not enough. Words are not enough.
Roberta Adorni & Alice Mado Proverbio. (2012) The neural manifestation of the word concreteness effect: An electrical neuroimaging study. Neuropsychologia 50:5, pages 880-891.
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Magalie Loiselle, Isabelle Rouleau, Dang Khoa Nguyen, François Dubeau, Joël Macoir, Christine Whatmough, Franco Lepore & Sven Joubert. (2012) Comprehension of concrete and abstract words in patients with selective anterior temporal lobe resection and in patients with selective amygdalo-hippocampectomy. Neuropsychologia 50:5, pages 630-639.
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Rutvik H. Desai, Jeffrey R. Binder, Lisa L. Conant, Quintino R. Mano & Mark S. Seidenberg. (2011) The Neural Career of Sensory-motor Metaphors. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 23:9, pages 2376-2386.
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Agnès Caño, Brenda Rapp, Albert Costa & Montserrat Juncadella. (2008) Deafness for the meanings of number words. Neuropsychologia 46:1, pages 63-81.
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