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Original Articles

The effect of theory of mind impairment on language: Referring after right-hemisphere damage

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Pages 1424-1460 | Received 14 May 2015, Accepted 26 Dec 2015, Published online: 16 Mar 2016

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Noga Balaban, Michal Biran & Yaron Sacher. (2019) Theory of Mind and referring expressions after Traumatic Brain Injury. Aphasiology 33:11, pages 1319-1347.
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Articles from other publishers (8)

Qian Zhang, Ruo-Han Chang & Zhen-Dong Wang. (2023) A Review on the Cognitive Neural Mechanisms of Anaphor Processing During Language Comprehension. Psychological Reports, pages 003329412311804.
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Jamila Minga, Shannon M. Sheppard, Melissa Johnson, Ronelle Hewetson, Petrea Cornwell & Margaret Lehman Blake. (2022) Apragmatism: The renewal of a label for communication disorders associated with right hemisphere brain damage. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 58:2, pages 651-666.
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Michal Biran, Aviah Gvion & Shira Shmuely-Samuel. (2023) Language in Healthy Ageing: A Comparison across Language Domains. Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica 75:2, pages 90-103.
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Ronelle Hewetson & Petrea Cornwell. 2023. Spoken Discourse Impairments in the Neurogenic Populations. Spoken Discourse Impairments in the Neurogenic Populations 81 96 .
Natasa Georgiou & George Spanoudis. (2021) Developmental Language Disorder and Autism: Commonalities and Differences on Language. Brain Sciences 11:5, pages 589.
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Noga Balaban, Petra Schulz & Naama Friedmann. (2019) Is Theory of Mind the basis for exhaustivity in wh-questions? Evidence from TOM impairment after right hemisphere damage. Journal of Neurolinguistics 52, pages 100853.
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Nufar Sukenik & Naama Friedmann. (2018) ASD Is Not DLI: Individuals With Autism and Individuals With Syntactic DLI Show Similar Performance Level in Syntactic Tasks, but Different Error Patterns. Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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