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Original Articles

WHY LEOPARDS NEVER CHANGE THEIR SPOTS: A REPLY TO MOSS, TYLER, AND JENNINGS

Pages 467-479 | Published online: 09 Sep 2010

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

Read on this site (2)

Ria De Bleser. (2009) History of aphasia. Aphasiology 23:12, pages 1427-1437.
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E. Capitani, M. Laiacona, B. Mahon & A. Caramazza. (2003) WHAT ARE THE FACTS OF SEMANTIC CATEGORY-SPECIFIC DEFICITS? A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE CLINICAL EVIDENCE. Cognitive Neuropsychology 20:3-6, pages 213-261.
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Articles from other publishers (5)

Guido Gainotti. (2011) Are the representations of animals and plant life subsumed by quite different cortical networks within the temporal lobes? A reply to Capitani & Laiacona (2011). Cortex 47:2, pages 265-270.
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Keith R. Laws & Giuseppe Sartori. (2005) Category Deficits and Paradoxical Dissociations in Alzheimer's Disease and Herpes Simplex Encephalitis. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 17:9, pages 1453-1459.
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Guido Gainotti. (2005) The influence of gender and lesion location on naming disorders for animals, plants and artefacts. Neuropsychologia 43:11, pages 1633-1644.
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Keith R. Laws. (2005) Categories, Controls and Ceilings. Cortex 41:6, pages 869-872.
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Keith R. Laws. (2005) “Illusions of Normality”: a Methodological Critique of Category-Specific Naming. Cortex 41:6, pages 842-851.
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