Late Acquired Words in Childhood Are Lost Earlier in Primary Progressive Aphasia
暂无分享,去创建一个
Jun Yamada | Kazuo Abe | K. Abe | J. Yamada | Hiromi Ukita | H. Ukita
[1] P. Scheltens,et al. Pathologic findings in a case of primary progressive aphasia , 1994, Neurology.
[2] C. Luzzatti,et al. Slowly progressive aphasia in three patients. The problem of accompanying neuropsychological deficit. , 1988, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[3] Marilyn M. Vihman,et al. Phonological Development , 2014 .
[4] E Capitani,et al. Progressive language impairment without dementia: a case with isolated category specific semantic defect. , 1988, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.
[5] T. Shallice,et al. Category specific semantic impairments , 1984 .
[6] R. Petersen,et al. Primary progressive aphasia , 1992 .
[7] R. C. Oldfield,et al. Object-naming by Dysphasic Patients , 1965, Nature.
[8] W. Levelt,et al. Speaking: From Intention to Articulation , 1990 .
[9] D. Ingram. JAKOBSON REVISITED: SOME EVIDENCE FROM THE ACQUISITION OF POLISH PHONOLOGY , 1988 .
[10] G. Rochford,et al. Studies in the development and breakdown of the use of names. IV. The effects of word frequency. , 1965, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.
[11] Y. Grodzinsky. Theoretical perspectives on language deficits , 1990 .
[12] M. Ashcraft,et al. A Personal Case History of Transient Anomia , 1993, Brain and Language.
[13] J. Hodges,et al. Progressive pure anomia: Insufficient activation of phonology by meaning , 1995 .
[14] M. N. Hart,et al. Progressive aphasia in a patient with Pick's disease , 1990, Neurology.
[15] R. Jakobson. Child Language, Aphasia and Phonological Universals , 1980 .
[16] M. Dennis,et al. Development of word-finding , 1986, Brain and Language.
[17] Gordon D. A. Brown,et al. First in, first out: Word learning age and spoken word frequency as predictors of word familiarity and word naming latency , 1987, Memory & cognition.
[18] A. Ellis. Progress in the psychology of language , 1985 .
[19] R. C. Oldfield,et al. Recognition and naming of object-drawings by men with focal brain wounds , 1971, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.
[20] G. Rochford,et al. I The relationship between nominal dysphasia and the acquisition of vocabulary in childhood , 1962 .
[21] D. Benson,et al. Slowly progressive aphasia: three cases with language, memory, CT and PET data. , 1990, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.
[22] Kirrie J. Ballard,et al. Patterns of language decline in non-fluent primary progressive aphasia , 1997 .
[23] D. Bub,et al. Primary Progressive Aphasia: A Review of 112 Cases , 1997, Brain and Language.
[24] M N Rossor,et al. Heterogeneity in progressive aphasia due to focal cortical atrophy. A clinical and PET study. , 1990, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[25] J. Tweedy,et al. Toward a functional classification of naming impairments , 1982, Brain and Language.
[26] M. Mesulam,et al. Primary progressive aphasia. Longitudinal course, neuropsychological profile, and language features. , 1990, Archives of neurology.
[27] J. Locke. Ease of articulation. , 1972, Journal of speech and hearing research.
[28] Richard D. Hichwa,et al. A neural basis for lexical retrieval , 1996, Nature.
[29] Marlene Behrmann,et al. Surface Dyslexia in Nonfluent Progressive Aphasia , 1997, Brain and Language.
[30] A. Parkin,et al. Progressive Aphasia without Dementia: A Clinical and Cognitive Neuropsychological Analysis , 1993, Brain and Language.
[31] M. Mesulam,et al. Slowly progressive aphasia without generalized dementia , 1982, Annals of neurology.
[32] E. Warrington,et al. CATEGORY SPECIFIC ACCESS DYSPHASIA , 1983 .
[33] J. Carroll,et al. Age-of-acquisition norms for 220 picturable nouns , 1973 .
[34] C. A. Ferguson,et al. WORDS AND SOUNDS IN EARLY LANGUAGE ACQUISITION , 1975 .
[35] Michael Gasser,et al. The Acquisition of the Lexicon , 1997 .