Brain and language
The 200 most cited articles
1. Auditory
temporal perception, phonics, and reading disabilities in children
2. Dissociation
of algorithmic and heuristic processes in language comprehension: Evidence from
aphasia
3. Word
production and comprehension in Alzheimer's diseáse: The breakdown of semantic
knowledge
4. Neural
modeling and imaging of the cortical interactions underlying syllable
production
5. Localization
of syntactic comprehension by positron emission tomography
6. Dissociations
of language function in dementia: A case study
7. Improved
picture naming in chronic aphasia after TMS to part of right Broca's area: An
open-protocol study
8. Neurolinguists,
beware! The bilingual is not two monolinguals in one person
9. A
study of language functioning in Alzheimer patients
10. Hemisphere
differences in the acquisition and use of descriptive systems
11. The
quantitative analysis of agrammatic production: Procedure and data
12. The
time course of syntactic activation during language processing: A model based
on neuropsychological and neurophysiological data
13. The
word order problem in agrammatism. I. Comprehension
14. Retrieval
of nouns and verbs in agrammatism and anomia
15. Confrontation
naming impairment in dementia
16. Cerebral
hemispheric mechanisms in the retrieval of ambiguous word meanings
17. Semantic
and associative priming in the cerebral hemispheres: Some words do, some words
don't ... sometimes, some places
18. Semantic
impairment and anomia in Alzheimer's disease
19. Language
acquisition following hemidecortication: Linguistic superiority of the left
over the right hemisphere
20. Naming
of object-drawings by dyslexic and other learning disabled children
21. Semantic
Processing in the Right Hemisphere May Contribute to Drawing Inferences from
Discourse
22. Hemispheric
differences in processing emotions and faces
23. MRI
evaluation of the size and symmetry of the planum temporale in adolescents with
developmental dyslexia
24. Control,
activation, and resource: A framework and a model for the control of speech in
bilinguals
25. Automatic
and attentional processing: An event-related brain potential analysis of
semantic priming
26. Auditory
language comprehension: An event-related fMRI study on the processing of
syntactic and lexical information
27. The
color of odors
28. The
logic of neuropsychological research and the problem of patient classification
in aphasia
29. The
mirror neuron system and action recognition
30. The
role of the right hemisphere in the apprehension of complex linguistic
materials
31. Verb
retrieval in aphasia: 1. Characterizing single word impairments
32. Predicting
dyslexia at 8 years of age using neonatal brain responses
33. Inference
deficits in right brain-damaged patients
34. Prosodic
disturbance and neurologic lesion
35. Subcortical
aphasia
36. Double
dissociation of semantic categories in Alzheimer's disease
37. Structure
and limited capacity in verbal working memory: A study with event-related
potentials
38. The
lateralized linguistic cerebellum: A review and a new hypothesis
39. Neural
localization of semantic context effects in electromagnetic and hemodynamic
studies
40. The
contribution of the insula to motor aspects of speech production: A review and
a hypothesis
41. Walking
or talking?: Behavioral and neurophysiological correlates of action verb
processing
42. Frontal
lobes and language
43. Conceptual
structure and the structure of concepts: A distributed account of
category-specific deficits
44. Wavelet
analysis of neuroelectric waveforms: A conceptual tutorial
45. Tense
and agreement in agrammatic production: Pruning the syntactic tree
46. An
fMRI study of sex differences in regional activation to a verbal and a spatial
task
47. Comparative
neuropsychology of the dual brain: A stroll through animals' left and right
perceptual worlds
48. Brain
plasticity in poststroke aphasia: What is the contribution of the right
hemisphere?
49. Language
localization and variability
50. Distinguishing
lies from jokes: Theory of mind deficits and discourse interpretation in right
hemisphere brain-damaged patients
51. Vocabulary
acquisition and verbal short-term memory: Computational and neural bases
52. Lateralization
of affective prosody in brain and the callosal integration of hemispheric
language functions
53. Language
deficits and the theory of syntax
54. Lateralization
of auditory language functions: A dynamic dual pathway model
55. Surprise
but not coherence: Sensitivity to verbal humor in right-hemisphere
patients
56. Immediate
memory for word lists and sentences in a patient with deficient auditory
short-term memory
57. The
psychological construct of word fluency
58. Impairment
of auditory perception and language comprehension in dysphasia
59. Convergent
cortical representation of semantic processing in bilinguals
60. The
ontogeny of brain lateralization for speech and nonspeech stimuli
61. Lexical
decision and aphasia: Evidence for semantic processing
62. Knowledge
of object manipulation and object function: Dissociations in apraxic and
nonapraxic subjects
63. Evolution
of hemispheric specialization: Advantages and disadvantages
64. In
search of the language switch: An fMRI study of picture naming in
Spanish-English bilinguals
65. On
the lateralization of emotional prosody: An event-related functional MR
investigation
66. Neuropsychological
profile of adult dyslexics
67. Mechanisms
for accessing lexical representations for output: Evidence from a
category-specific semantic deficit
68. Recognition
and discrimination of emotional faces and pictures
69. A
proposed regional hierarchy in recovery of post-stroke aphasia
70. Identification
of language-impaired children on the basis of rapid perception and production
skills
71. "Frog,
where are you?" Narratives in children with specific language impairment,
early focal brain injury, and Williams syndrome
72. Neural
evidence for the interplay between language, gesture, and action: A review
73. Asymmetries
in the perceptual span for Israeli readers
74. Auditory
perception of temporal and spectral events in patients with focal left and
right cerebral lesions
75. Computer
tomographic localization, lesion size, and prognosis in aphasia and nonverbal
impairment
76. Subcortical
functions in language: A working model
77. Rapid
alternating stimulus naming in the developmental dyslexias
78. Regional
cerebral blood flow measurements by 133Xe-inhalation: Methodology and
applications in neuropsychology and psychiatry
79. Neuroanatomical
distribution of five semantic components of verbs: Evidence from fMRI
80. Acquired
aphasia in children and the ontogenesis of hemispheric functional
specialization
81. An
fMRI investigation of the neural correlates underlying the processing of novel
metaphoric expressions
82. The
relation of planum temporale asymmetry and morphology of the corpus callosum to
handedness, gender, and dyslexia: A review of the evidence
83. Priming
and semantic memory loss in Alzheimer's disease
84. Comprehension
of syntax in infantile hemiplegics after cerebral hemidecortication:
Left-hemisphere superiority
85. Hesitation
and the production of verbal paraphasias and neologisms in jargon aphasia
86. Handedness
and sex differences in hemispheric asymmetry
87. Patterns
of discourse production among neurological patients with fluent language
disorders
88. Language
disintegration in dementia: Effects of etiology and severity
89. A
PET follow-up study of recovery after stroke in acute aphasics
90. A
critical review of PET studies of phonological processing
91. Processing
prosodic and musical patterns: A neuropsychological investigation
92. Origins
of Paraphasias in Deep Dysphasia: Testing the Consequences of a Decay
Impairment to an Interactive Spreading Activation Model of Lexical
Retrieval
93. Attentional
biases and the right-ear effect in dichotic listening
94. Contrasting
cases of Italian agrammatic aphasia without comprehension disorder
95. A
computational account of deep dysphasia: Evidence from a single case study
96. MRI
findings in boys with specific language impairment
97. Comprehension
of familiar phrases by left- but not by right-hemisphere damaged patients
98. Event-related
potentials in phonological matching tasks
99. Why
is a verb like an inanimate object? Grammatical category and semantic category
deficits
100. An
On-Line Analysis of Syntactic Processing in Broca′s and Wernicke′s Aphasia
101. Language
function in senile dementia
102. Phonological
encoding and ideographic reading by the disconnected right hemisphere: Two case
studies
103. Patterns
of comprehension and production of nouns and verbs in agrammatism: Implications
for lexical organization
104. Speech
production, syntax comprehension, and cognitive deficits in Parkinson's
disease
105. Neural
systems mediating American Sign Language: Effects of sensory experience and age
of acquisition
106. Different
methods of lexical access for words presented in the left and right visual
hemifields
107. Production
deficits in aphasia: A voice-onset time analysis
108. A
theory of neurolinguistic development
109. Early
lexical development in children with focal brain injury
110. Reading
between the lines: Event-related brain potentials during natural sentence
processing
111. Weak
coherence, no theory of mind, or executive dysfunction? Solving the puzzle of
pragmatic language disorders
112. The
effects of right hemisphere damage on the pragmatic interpretation of
conversational remarks
113. Putative
sex differences in verbal abilities and language cortex: A critical review
114. Picture
naming deficits in developmental dyslexia: The phonelogical representations
hypothesis
115. Early
naming deficits, developmental dyslexia, and a specific deficit hypothesis
116. Assignment
of thematic roles to nouns in sentence comprehension by an agrammatic
patient
117. Narrative
discourse after closed head injury in children and adolescents
118. An
exploration of right-hemisphere contributions to the pragmatic impairments of
autism
119. Hemisphere
dynamics in lexical access: Automatic and controlled priming
120. Anatomoclinical
correlations of the aphasias as defined through computerized tomography:
Exceptions
121. Reproducibility
of fMRI-determined language lateralization in individual subjects
122. Verb
retrieval in aphasia: 2. Relationship to sentence processing
123. Picture-naming
in aphasia
124. The
word order problem in agrammatism. II. Production
125. Embodied
meaning in a neural theory of language
126. Verb-noun
double dissociation in aphasic lexical impairments: The role of word frequency
and imageability
127. A
comparison of the category fluency deficits associated with Alzheimer's and
Huntington's disease
128. An
investigation of repetition and language processing in a case of conduction
aphasia
129. Cerebral
organization in left-handers
130. Semantic
priming effects, lexical repetition effects, and contextual disambiguation
effects in healthy aged individuals and individuals with senile dementia of the
Alzheimer type
131. Semantic
factors in verb retrieval: An effect of complexity
132. The
efficacy of treatment for aphasic persons: A meta-analysis
133. Visual
field differences in verbal tasks: Effects of task familiarity and sex of
subject
134. Mechanisms
of aphasia recovery after stroke and the role of noninvasive brain
stimulation
135. Narrative
discourse in children with early focal brain injury
136. Developmental
aspects of verbal fluency and confrontation naming in children
137. Semantic
field, naming, and auditory comprehension in aphasia
138. Dissociation
of inflectional and derivational morphology
139. Auditory-verbal
short-term memory impairment and conduction aphasia
140. Knowing
the meaning, getting the point, bridging the gap, and carrying the message:
Aspects of discourse following closed head injury in childhood and
adolescence
141. Deep
agraphia
142. Right
and left hemisphere cooperation for drawing predictive and coherence inferences
during normal story comprehension
143. On
the brain response to syntactic anomalies: Manipulations of word position and
word class reveal individual differences
144. Neurology
of affective prosody and its functional-anatomic organization in right
hemisphere
145. Visual
hemifield differences depend on typeface
146. Depression
in aphasic patients: Frequency, severity, and clinical-pathological
correlations
147. Capacity
and strategy for syntactic comprehension after left or right
hemidecortication
148. The
contribution of EEG coherence to the investigation of language
149. Semantic
processing in aphasia: Evidence from an auditory lexical decision task
150. The
spreen-benton aphasia tests, normative data as a measure of normal language
development
151. Thalamic
hemorrhage and aphasia
152. Neural
correlates of lexical and sublexical processes in reading
153. The
bilingual brain: Cerebral representation of languages
154. Understanding
in an instant: Neurophysiological evidence for mechanistic language circuits in
the brain
155. Motor
functions of the Broca's region
156. The
rise and fall of frequency and imageability: Noun and verb production in
semantic dementia
157. Verb
processing during sentence comprehension in aphasia
158. Variation
in the pattern of omissions and substitutions of grammatical morphemes in the
spontaneous speech of so-called agrammatic patients
159. Appreciation
of indirect requests by left- and right-brain-damaged patients: The effects of
verbal context and conventionality of wording
160. Sensitivity
to lexical denotation and connotation in brain-damaged patients: A double
dissociation?
161. Cognitive
task effects on hemispheric blood flow in humans: Evidence for individual
differences in hemispheric activation
162. Organization
of short-term verbal memory in language areas of human cortex: Evidence from
electrical stimulation
163. Shared
and separate systems in bilingual language processing: Converging evidence from
eyetracking and brain imaging
164. Bilingual
performance on the Boston Naming Test: Preliminary norms in Spanish and
English
165. Speech-associated
gestures, Broca's area, and the human mirror system
166. A
linguist looks at "schizophrenic" language
167. The
development of language in genie: a case of language acquisition beyond the
"critical period"
168. Early
and late mismatch negativity elicited by words and speech-like stimuli in
children
169. The
neurodevelopmental frontostriatal disorders: Evolutionary adaptiveness and
anomalous lateralization
170. Relearning
after damage in connectionist networks: Toward a theory of rehabilitation
171. Recovery
in deep dysphasia: Evidence for a relation between auditory - Verbal STM
capacity and lexical errors in repetition
172. A
Restrictive Theory of Agrammatic Comprehension
173. Patterns
of cerebral organization
174. A
fMRI study of word retrieval in aphasia
175. Age
constraints on first versus second language acquisition: Evidence for
linguistic plasticity and epigenesis
176. Conduction
aphasia and the arcuate fasciculus: A reexamination of the Wernicke-Geschwind
model
177. MRI
asymmetries of Broca's area: The pars triangularis and pars opercularis
178. Separate
verbal memory and naming deficits in attention deficit disorder and reading
disability
179. On
the nature of the verbal memory deficit in Alzheimer's disease
180. Perception
of facial expressions
181. Phonotactics,
neighborhood activation, and lexical access for spoken words
182. Cerebral
mechanisms for suppression of inappropriate information during sentence
comprehension
183. Pragmatic
language skills after closed head injury: Ability to meet the informational
needs of the listener
184. Modes
of word recognition in the left and right cerebral hemispheres
185. Comprehension
of symbolic gestures in aphasia
186. Brain
activity varies with modulation of dynamic pitch variance in sentence
melody
187. Total
surface of temporoparietal intrasylvian cortex: Diverging left-right
asymmetries
188. The
effects of right and left hemiparkinsonism on prosody
189. Syllable
frequency and syllable structure in apraxia of speech
190. Right
hemisphere activation during indirect semantic priming: Evidence from
event-related potentials
191. Naming
and knowing in dementia of Alzheimer's type
192. The
selective impairment of phonological processing: A case study
193. Conduction
aphasia, sensory-motor integration, and phonological short-term memory - An
aggregate analysis of lesion and fMRI data
194. Parametrically
dissociating speech and nonspeech perception in the brain using fMRI
195. Deep
dyslexia, imageability, and ease of predication
196. Effects
of speech and language treatment on recovery from aphasia
197. Processing
of lexical ambiguities in aphasia
198. The
role of the cerebral hemispheres in music
199. Electromagnetic
articulography: Use of alternating magnetic fields for tracking movements of
multiple points inside and outside the vocal tract
200. Event-related
potentials, semantic processes, and expectancy factors in word recognition
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