All Stories

  1. Pragmatics and figurative language in individuals with traumatic brain injury: fine-grained assessment and relevance-theoretic considerations
  2. Proper name retrieval in cognitive decline
  3. Numerical activities of daily living in adults with neurofibromatosis type 1
  4. Subcortical mapping of calculation processing in the right parietal lobe
  5. Proper and Common Names: Impairments of Anomia
  6. Right-hemisphere (spatial?) acalculia and the influence of neglect
  7. Mapping the Brain for Math
  8. A new clinical tool for assessing numerical abilities in neurological diseases: numerical activities of daily living
  9. Word structure and decomposition effects in reading
  10. Combining words in the brain: The processing of compound words.Introduction to the special issue
  11. Gender Agreement: a psycholinguistic and aphasia case study.
  12. Sparing of number words in oral production
  13. Right parietal cortex and calculation processing: intraoperative functional mapping of multiplication and addition in patients affected by a brain tumor
  14. Cultural modulations of space–time compatibility effects
  15. Reading Italian Compound Words
  16. Can Verbal Features Affect Nouns Retrieval in Aphasia?
  17. Diminutivization in Patients with Aphasia and Children
  18. Meeting an “impossible challenge” in semantic dementia: Outstanding performance in numerical Sudoku and quantitative number knowledge.
  19. Genetics and mathematics: FMR1 premutation female carriers
  20. Selective IGT decision-making impairment in a patient with juvenile Parkinson's disease and pathological gambling: A role for dopaminergic therapy?
  21. Assessing DP in a Case of Agrammatism
  22. Naming Compounds in Logopenic Primary Progressive Aphasia
  23. Psychological Verbs in Aphasic Comprehension
  24. The Production of Stressed and Unstressed Vowels in Aphasia
  25. Gender Errors in Aphasia Reveal a Projection for Contextually Dependent Gender in Syntax
  26. Specific numerical processing impairment in ALS patients
  27. Covert reading of letters in a case of global alexia
  28. Preservation of Auditory P300-Like Potentials in Cortical Deafness
  29. 3.302 INHIBITORY FUNCTIONS IN PARKINSON'S DISEASE
  30. Allographic Agraphia for Single letters
  31. Lexical and Buffer Effects in Reading and in Writing Noun-Noun Compound Nouns
  32. Persistent cortical deafness: A voxel-based morphometry and tractography study.
  33. Is “Hit and Run” a Single Word? The Processing of Irreversible Binomials in Neglect Dyslexia
  34. On the dependency of division on multiplication: Selective loss for conceptual knowledge of multiplication
  35. Compounds in different aphasia categories: A study on picture naming
  36. When two and too don’t go together: A selective phonological deficit sparing number words
  37. Reading compounds in neglect dyslexia: The headedness effect
  38. Good division, but bad addition, subtraction and multiplication. A “leftmost-first” bug?
  39. Target-Unrelated Verbal Paraphasias: A Case Study
  40. Nominalization in the Verb-Noun Dissociation
  41. Naming with Proper Names: The Left Temporal Pole Theory
  42. The Mental Representation of Irreversible Binomials: Evidence from a Serial Recall Task
  43. Selective Scrambling in a Case of Mixed Transcortical Aphasia
  44. Word sequences in the mental lexicon: the case of irreversible binomials
  45. Language-specific effects in Alzheimer’s disease: Subject omission in Italian and English
  46. On nouns, verbs, lexemes, and lemmas: Evidence from the spontaneous speech of seven aphasic patients
  47. Right hemisphere dysfunction and emotional processing in ALS: an fMRI study
  48. Psychopathological features and suicidal ideation in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients
  49. Assessing disorders of awareness and representation of body parts
  50. Characteristic ontogenesis of vision-for-action and vision-for-perception revealed by two spatial tasks
  51. SYMPOSIUM: Neuropsychology, Neuroimaging and Neurophysiology of Compound Processing
  52. Nominalization in Aphasia: A Case Study
  53. Irreversible Binomials: Evidence from Neglect Dyslexia
  54. Persistent Cortical Deafness: A Case Report
  55. Noun-Verb Distinction as a Consequence of Antisymmetry: Evidence from Primary Progressive Aphasia
  56. Why Does a “Moglie” (Wife) Become a “Maiale” (Pig)? An Investigation of Factors Affecting Reading Performance in a Case of Visual Dyslexia
  57. Cognitive and Personality Features in Parkinson Disease: 2 Sides of the Same Coin?
  58. Motion on Numbers: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation on the Ventral Intraparietal Sulcus Alters Both Numerical and Motion Processes
  59. The Neuropsychology of Proper Names
  60. The processing of compounds in bilingual aphasia: A multiple‐case study
  61. Numbers in the Blind's “Eye”
  62. Leftward motion restores number space in neglect
  63. Distance Perception in Autism and Typical Development
  64. Allographic agraphia: A case study
  65. The role of working memory in the association between number magnitude and space
  66. Neural correlates of Italian nominal compounds and potential impact of headedness effect: An ERP study
  67. Sensory and cognitive processes of shifts of spatial attention induced by numbers: An ERP study
  68. P1.102 Naming an action and standing from a chair: verbal-motor correlation in Parkinson's disease
  69. Number Processing
  70. Mass and Count nouns activate different brain regions: An ERP study on early components
  71. Genetics and mathematics: Evidence from Prader-Willi syndrome
  72. Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment: Effects of shifting and interference in simple arithmetic
  73. Naming compounds in Alzheimer’s disease
  74. The processing of compounds in bilingual aphasia
  75. The electrophysiological correlates of Noun–Noun compounds
  76. Noun–noun compounds in the access to the phonological output buffer
  77. The Neuropsychology of Compound Words
  78. Differential Impairment of Inhibitory Functions in Parkinson's Disease
  79. Numbers and Space? Yes, But Having Room in Working Memory
  80. A dedicated neural mechanism for vowel selection: A case of relative vowel deficit sparing the number lexicon
  81. Why Should We Care About “Fluent Aphasia?” The Importance of Studying Connected Speech in Aphasiology
  82. Naming abilities in spontaneous speech in Parkinson and Alzheimer’s disease
  83. A noun-relative-to-verb deficit in accessing an intact word form
  84. Noun–verb dissociation in aphasia: Type/token differences in the analysis of spontaneous speech
  85. Retrieval of compound words in picture naming. A study in Alzheimer’s disease and in aphasia
  86. Is math lateralised on the same side as language? Right hemisphere aphasia and mathematical abilities
  87. On knowing about nothing: The processing of zero in single- and multi-digit multiplication
  88. Decision-making in obesity: A study using the Gambling Task
  89. Vision-for-perception and vision-for-action in typical development, autism, and Parkinson’s disease
  90. Living, non-living and other things. What can be learned nowadays from category-specific deficits?
  91. Retrieval Pathways for Common and Proper Names
  92. Acalculia from a right hemisphere lesion
  93. The (neuro)-psychology of mass and count nouns
  94. Naming compounds in aphasia and in Alzheimer’s disease
  95. Subject drop in Italian Alzheimer’s disease
  96. Broca’s aphasia and arithmetical disorders in 49,XXXXY syndrome
  97. A relative vowel deficit in aphasia sparing the lexicon of numbers
  98. Mass and count nouns show distinct EEG cortical processes during an explicit semantic task
  99. Effects of a specific numeracy educational program in kindergarten children: A pilot study
  100. Mental representation of prepositional compounds: Evidence from Italian agrammatic patients
  101. Mathematics in right hemisphere aphasia: A case series study
  102. The mental representation of Verb–Noun compounds in Italian: Evidence from a multiple single-case study in aphasia
  103. Verb-Noun Compounds in Italian: A Multiple Single-Case Study
  104. Inductive reasoning and implicit memory: evidence from intact and impaired memory systems
  105. Hemispheric differences in dichaptic scanning of verbal and spatial material by adult males and females
  106. Singing: A Selective Deficit in the Retrieval of Musical Intervals
  107. He can tell which master craftsman blew a Venetian vase, but he can not name the Pope: a patient with a selective difficulty in naming faces
  108. Updating and inhibition processes in working memory: A comparison between Alzheimer’s type dementia and frontal lobe focal damage
  109. Syntactically reduced speech in Italian Broca’s aphasics and normal speakers
  110. Numbers and calculation in crossed aphasia
  111. He can tell which master craftsman blew a Venetian vase, but he can not name the Pope: a patient with a selective difficulty in naming faces
  112. Writing and Rewriting Arabic Numerals: Dissociated Processing Pathways?
  113. Transcoding zeros within complex numerals
  114. Verbal Free Recall in High Altitude: Proper Names vs Common Names
  115. Anomia for people names in DAT—evidence for semantic and post-semantic impairments
  116. Common daily activities in the virtual environment: a preliminary study in parkinsonian patients
  117. Names and identification: an access problem
  118. Derivation by Prefixation in Slovenian: Two Aphasia Case Studies
  119. Why Is “Red Cross” Different from “Yellow Cross”?: A Neuropsychological Study of Noun–Adjective Agreement within Italian Compounds
  120. Conceptual Knowledge in Arithmetic: The Core of Calculation Skills
  121. Lexical Representation and Processing of Morphologically Complex Words: Evidence from the Reading Performance of an Italian Agrammatic Patient
  122. Letter and number writing in agraphia: A single-case study
  123. Executive deficits appearing in the initial stage of alzheimer's disease
  124. Response to Commentaries by Carlo Semenza (Trieste)
  125. Psychoanalysis and Cognitive Neuropsychology: Theoretical and Methodological Affinities
  126. Naming of Musical Notes: A Selective Deficit in One Musical Clef
  127. ERP indexes of functional differences in brain activation during proper and common names retrieval
  128. Compound Words: A Challenge for Aphasiology
  129. Numerical skills and aphasia
  130. Lemma theory and aphasiology
  131. Repetition priming in simple addition depends on surface form and typicality
  132. Names and identification: an access problem
  133. Names and Identification: An Access Problem
  134. The Processing of Compound Words: A Study in Aphasia
  135. Names and identification: An access problem
  136. The grammatical properties of mass nouns: An aphasia case study
  137. Proper-Name-Specific Aphasias
  138. A Deficit for Arithmetical Procedures: Lack of Knowledge or Lack of Monitoring?
  139. Morphological representation of compound nouns: A study on Italian aphasic patients
  140. Hemispheric specialization for sign language
  141. Generating proper names: a case of selective inability
  142. Evidence from aphasia for the role of proper names as pure referring expressions
  143. Production of proper names: a clinical case study of the effects of phonemic cueing
  144. Dichaptic Scanning of Braille Letters by Skilled Blind Readers: Lateralization Effects
  145. The Representation Of Arithmetical Facts: Evidence from two Rehabilitation Studies
  146. Generating visual mental images: Deficit after brain damage
  147. The Anatomical Basis of Proper Name Processing. A Critical Review
  148. The anatomical basis of proper name processing. A critical review
  149. Constructing Subject-Verb Agreement in Speech: The Role of Semantic and Morphological Factors
  150. Anomia for people's names
  151. Locus-pocus (which and whose locality assumption?)
  152. Concepts and facts in calculation
  153. How two aphasic speakers construct subject—Verb agreement
  154. Naming by German compounds
  155. Naming disorders and semantic representations
  156. Reading aloud in jargonaphasia: an unusual dissociation in speech output.
  157. Analysis of the Spontaneous Writing Errors of Normal and Aphasic Writers
  158. Computing agreement in sentence production
  159. An Unusual Case of Perseveration Sparing Body-Related Tasks
  160. Paragrammatisms: A longitudinal study of an Italian patient
  161. Word formation: New evidence from aphasia
  162. Free Use of Derivational Morphology in an Italian Jargonaphasic
  163. Study of the temporal variables in the spontaneous speech of three neologistic jargonaphasics
  164. Evidence from aphasia for the role of proper names as pure referring expressions
  165. Impaired grating discrimination following right hemisphere damage
  166. Generating proper names: A case of selective inability
  167. Impairment in Localization of Body Parts Following Brain Damage
  168. Modality and category specific aphasias
  169. How does a phonological dyslexic read words she has never seen?
  170. Compensatory processes in the evolution of severe jargon aphasia
  171. Right hemisphere patients’judgements on emotions
  172. The role of the right hemisphere in processing negative sentences in context
  173. Localization of body parts in brain injured subjects
  174. Recognition memory in conversion hysteria: effect of sexual stimuli during learning
  175. Discrimination and identification of emotions in human voice by brain-damaged subjects
  176. Effect of Concurrent Activity on Strategies in Copying Designs
  177. First European workshop on cognitive neuropsychology: An interdisciplinary approach
  178. Difficulty in Reaching Objects and Body Parts: A Sensorymotor Disconnexion Syndrome
  179. UNILATERAL SPATIAL NEGLECT AND RECOVERY FROM HEMIPLEGIA
  180. Evaluation of endorphin content in the CSF of patients with trigeminal neuralgia before and after Gasserian ganglion thermocoagulation
  181. Analytic and Global Strategies in Copying Designs by Unilaterally Brain-Damaged Patients
  182. Selective improvement by unilateral brain-damaged patients on raven coloured progressive matrices
  183. Sensitivity To Musical Denotation And Connotation In Organic Patients
  184. Auditory Modality-Specific Anomia: Evidence from a Case of Pure Word Deafness