Citation: Cr. Luo et A. Caramazza, TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL REPETITION BLINDNESS - EFFECTS OF PRESENTATION MODE AND REPETITION LAG ON THE PERCEPTION OF REPEATED ITEMS, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance, 22(1), 1996, pp. 95-113
Citation: A. Hillis et al., DISSOLUTION OF SPELLING IN A PATIENT WITH ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE - EVIDENCE FOR PHONEME-TO-GRAPHEME CORRESPONDENCE RULES, Brain and language, 55(1), 1996, pp. 62-65
Citation: G. Miceli et al., AUTONOMY AND INTERACTION OF ORTHOGRAPHIC AND PHONOLOGICAL LEXEMES - EVIDENCE FROM APHASIA, Brain and language, 55(1), 1996, pp. 107-109
Authors:
MICELI G
AMITRANO A
CAPASSO R
CARAMAZZA A
Citation: G. Miceli et al., THE TREATMENT OF ANEMIA RESULTING FROM OUTPUT LEXICAL DAMAGE - ANALYSIS OF 2 CASES, Brain and language, 52(1), 1996, pp. 150-174
Citation: Ae. Hillis et A. Caramazza, THE COMPOSITIONALITY OF LEXICAL SEMANTIC REPRESENTATIONS - CLUES FROMSEMANTIC ERRORS IN OBJECT NAMING, Memory, 3(3-4), 1995, pp. 333-358
Citation: Ae. Hillis et A. Caramazza, COGNITIVE AND NEURAL MECHANISMS UNDERLYING VISUAL AND SEMANTIC PROCESSING - IMPLICATIONS FROM OPTIC APHASIA, Journal of cognitive neuroscience, 7(4), 1995, pp. 457-478
Citation: Ae. Hillis et A. Caramazza, REPRESENTATION OF GRAMMATICAL CATEGORIES OF WORDS IN THE BRAIN, Journal of cognitive neuroscience, 7(3), 1995, pp. 396-407
Citation: D. Chialant et A. Caramazza, THE ROLE OF LEXICAL FACTORS IN REPETITION BLINDNESS - THE CASE OF HOMONYMS, Brain and cognition, 28(2), 1995, pp. 202-202
Citation: B. Rapp et al., EVIDENCE REGARDING THE INDEPENDENCE OF ORTHOGRAPHIC AND PHONOLOGICAL REPRESENTATIONS, Brain and cognition, 28(2), 1995, pp. 205-205
Citation: Mj. Tainturier et A. Caramazza, ORTHOGRAPHIC REPRESENTATIONS AS MULTIDIMENSIONAL STRUCTURES - FURTHEREVIDENCE FROM ACQUIRED DYSGRAPHIA, Brain and cognition, 28(1), 1995, pp. 95-96
Citation: Sp. Law et A. Caramazza, ORTHOGRAPHIC REPRESENTATIONS OF CHINESE PHONETIC COMPOUNDS IN WRITING, Brain and cognition, 28(1), 1995, pp. 126-126
Citation: Ae. Hillis et al., CONSTRAINING CLAIMS ABOUT THEORIES OF SEMANTIC MEMORY - MORE ON UNITARY VERSUS MULTIPLE SEMANTICS, Cognitive neuropsychology, 12(2), 1995, pp. 175-186
Citation: Ae. Hillis et A. Caramazza, CONVERGING EVIDENCE FOR THE INTERACTION OF SEMANTIC AND SUBLEXICAL PHONOLOGICAL INFORMATION IN ACCESSING LEXICAL REPRESENTATIONS FOR SPOKENOUTPUT, Cognitive neuropsychology, 12(2), 1995, pp. 187-227
Citation: Ae. Hillis et A. Caramazza, SPATIALLY SPECIFIC DEFICITS IN PROCESSING GRAPHEMIC REPRESENTATIONS IN READING AND WRITING, Brain and language, 48(3), 1995, pp. 263-308
Citation: Cr. Luo et A. Caramazza, REPETITION BLINDNESS UNDER MINIMUM MEMORY LOAD - EFFECTS OF SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PROXIMITY AND THE ENCODING EFFECTIVENESS OF THE FIRST ITEM, Perception & psychophysics, 57(7), 1995, pp. 1053-1064
Citation: A. Caramazza, PARALLELS AND DIVERGENCES IN THE ACQUISITION AND DISSOLUTION OF LANGUAGE, Philosophical transactions-Royal Society of London. Biological sciences, 346(1315), 1994, pp. 121-127
Citation: Ec. Leek et al., ACCESSING SEMANTICS FROM VISION - THE CASE-STUDY OF A PATIENT WITH A VISUAL MODALITY-SPECIFIC NAMING IMPAIRMENT, Brain and language, 47(3), 1994, pp. 323-325
Citation: Ae. Hillis et A. Caramazza, ASPECTS OF SEMANTIC PROCESSING REVEALED BY OPTIC APHASIA - ADDITIONALINSIGHTS PROVIDED BY NEW EVIDENCE, Brain and language, 47(3), 1994, pp. 380-383