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Original Articles

The impact of phonological or semantic impairment on delayed auditory repetition: Evidence from stroke aphasia and semantic dementia

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Pages 963-992 | Published online: 07 Mar 2011

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Read on this site (11)

Joël Macoir, Robert Laforce & Monica Lavoie. (2023) The impact of phonological short-term memory impairment on verbal repetition in the logopenic variant of primary progressive aphasia. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition 0:0, pages 1-19.
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Marco Calabria, Elizabeth Jefferies, Isabel Sala, Estrella Morenas-Rodríguez, Ignacio Illán-Gala, Victor Montal, Juan Fortea, Alberto Lleó & Albert Costa. (2021) Multilingualism in semantic dementia: language-dependent lexical retrieval from degraded conceptual representations. Aphasiology 35:2, pages 240-266.
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Emma Pilkington, Karen Sage, Douglas Saddy & Holly Robson. (2020) When does lexical availability influence phonology? Evidence from Jargon reading and repetition. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 35:4, pages 521-540.
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Marcelo L. Berthier, Guadalupe Dávila, Cristina Green-Heredia, Ignacio Moreno Torres, Rocío Juárez y Ruiz de Mier, Irene De-Torres & Rafael Ruiz-Cruces. (2014) Massed sentence repetition training can augment and speed up recovery of speech production deficits in patients with chronic conduction aphasia receiving donepezil treatment. Aphasiology 28:2, pages 188-218.
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Jamie Reilly, Joshua Troche, Alison Paris, Hyejin Park, Michelene Kalinyak-Fliszar, SharonM. Antonucci & Nadine Martin. (2012) Lexicality effects in word and nonword recall of semantic dementia and progressive nonfluent aphasia. Aphasiology 26:3-4, pages 404-427.
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Elizabeth Jefferies, Clive Frankish & Katie Noble. (2011) Strong and long: Effects of word length on phonological binding in verbal short-term memory. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 64:2, pages 241-260.
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Carolyn E. Wilshire, Leonie M. Keall & Debra J. O'Donnell. (2010) Semantic contributions to immediate serial recall: Evidence from two contrasting aphasic individuals. Neurocase 16:4, pages 331-351.
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Chris Code, Nicole Muller, Jeremy Tree & Martin Ball. (2006) Syntactic impairments can emerge later: Progressive agrammatic agraphia and syntactic comprehension impairment. Aphasiology 20:9, pages 1035-1058.
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Articles from other publishers (19)

Rocco Chiou, Elizabeth Jefferies, John Duncan, Gina F Humphreys & Matthew A Lambon Ralph. (2023) A middle ground where executive control meets semantics: the neural substrates of semantic control are topographically sandwiched between the multiple-demand and default-mode systems. Cerebral Cortex 33:8, pages 4512-4526.
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Lucie Attout, Coline Grégoire, Pauline Querella & Steve Majerus. (2022) Neural evidence for a separation of semantic and phonological control processes. Neuropsychologia 176, pages 108377.
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Nicola J. Savill, Piers Cornelissen, Anja Pahor & Elizabeth Jefferies. (2019) rTMS evidence for a dissociation in short-term memory for spoken words and nonwords. Cortex 112, pages 5-22.
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Nicola Savill, Rachel Ellis, Emma Brooke, Tiffany Koa, Suzie Ferguson, Elena Rojas-Rodriguez, Dominic Arnold, Jonathan Smallwood & Elizabeth Jefferies. (2017) Keeping it together: Semantic coherence stabilizes phonological sequences in short-term memory. Memory & Cognition 46:3, pages 426-437.
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Rocco Chiou & Matthew A. Lambon Ralph. (2018) The anterior-ventrolateral temporal lobe contributes to boosting visual working memory capacity for items carrying semantic information. NeuroImage 169, pages 453-461.
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Marija Tochadse, Ajay D. Halai, Matthew A. Lambon Ralph & Stefanie Abel. (2018) Unification of behavioural, computational and neural accounts of word production errors in post-stroke aphasia. NeuroImage: Clinical 18, pages 952-962.
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Nicola Savill, Andrew W. Ellis & Elizabeth Jefferies. (2017) Newly-acquired words are more phonologically robust in verbal short-term memory when they have associated semantic representations. Neuropsychologia 98, pages 85-97.
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Christopher J. Markiewicz & Jason W. Bohland. (2016) Mapping the cortical representation of speech sounds in a syllable repetition task. NeuroImage 141, pages 174-190.
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Anna M. Woollams. (2015) For richer or poorer? Imageability effects in semantic dementia patients’ reading aloud. Neuropsychologia 76, pages 254-263.
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Claude J. Bajada, Matthew A. Lambon Ralph & Lauren L. Cloutman. (2015) Transport for language south of the Sylvian fissure: The routes and history of the main tracts and stations in the ventral language network. Cortex 69, pages 141-151.
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Taiji Ueno, Satoru Saito, Akie Saito, Yuki Tanida, Karalyn Patterson & Matthew A. Lambon Ralph. (2014) Not Lost in Translation: Generalization of the Primary Systems Hypothesis to Japanese-specific Language Processes. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 26:2, pages 433-446.
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Lauren L. Cloutman. (2013) Interaction between dorsal and ventral processing streams: Where, when and how?. Brain and Language 127:2, pages 251-263.
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Gary S. Dell, Myrna F. Schwartz, Nazbanou Nozari, Olufunsho Faseyitan & H. Branch Coslett. (2013) Voxel-based lesion-parameter mapping: Identifying the neural correlates of a computational model of word production. Cognition 128:3, pages 380-396.
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Nazbanou Nozari & Gary S. Dell. (2013) How damaged brains repeat words: A computational approach. Brain and Language 126:3, pages 327-337.
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Paul J. Conroy, Claerwen Snell, Karen E. Sage & Matthew A. Lambon Ralph. (2012) Using Phonemic Cueing of Spontaneous Naming to Predict Item Responsiveness to Therapy for Anomia in Aphasia. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 93:1, pages S53-S60.
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Paul Hoffman, Elizabeth Jefferies & Matthew A. Lambon Ralph. (2011) Remembering ‘zeal’ but not ‘thing’: Reverse frequency effects as a consequence of deregulated semantic processing. Neuropsychologia 49:3, pages 580-584.
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Nazbanou Nozari, Audrey K. Kittredge, Gary S. Dell & Myrna F. Schwartz. (2010) Naming and repetition in aphasia: Steps, routes, and frequency effects. Journal of Memory and Language 63:4, pages 541-559.
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Elizabeth Jefferies, Paul Hoffman, Roy Jones & Matthew A. Lambon Ralph. (2008) The impact of semantic impairment on verbal short-term memory in stroke aphasia and semantic dementia: A comparative study. Journal of Memory and Language 58:1, pages 66-87.
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Elizabeth Jefferies, Karen Sage & Matthew A. Lambon Ralph. (2007) Do deep dyslexia, dysphasia and dysgraphia share a common phonological impairment?. Neuropsychologia 45:7, pages 1553-1570.
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