All Stories

  1. Late-L2 increased reliance on L1 neurocognitive substrates: A comment on Babcock, Stowe, Maloof, Brovetto & Ullman (2012)
  2. Principles underlying the Bilingual Aphasia Test (BAT) and its uses
  3. Cerebral division of labour in verbal communication
  4. Declarative and Procedural Determinants of Second Languages
  5. Bilingual effects are not unique, only more salient
  6. Bilingualism and neuropsychiatric disorders
  7. Bilingual laterality: Unfounded claim of validity
  8. L1 attrition features predicted by a neurolinguistic theory of bilingualism
  9. More belles infidèles—or why do so many bilingual studies speak with forked tongue?
  10. Cerebral division of labour in verbal communication
  11. A Neurolinguistic Theory of Bilingualism
  12. Cerebral processes involved in reading as a function of the structure of various writing systems
  13. The need for awareness of aphasia symptoms in different languages
  14. Cerebral representation of bilingual concepts
  15. The Neurolinguistics of Bilingualism in the Next Decades
  16. Prerequisites to a Study of Neurolinguistic Processes involved in Simultaneous Interpreting A Synopsis
  17. Generalizable Outcomes of Bilingual Aphasia Research
  18. Acquired Aphasia in Bilingual Speakers
  19. Language and Communication in Multilinguals
  20. The other side of language: Pragmatic competence
  21. Compensatory strategies in genetic dysphasia: Declarative memory
  22. Selective Deficit in One Language Is Not a Demonstration of Different Anatomical Representation: Comments on Gomez-Tortosa et al. (1995)
  23. When the Interpretation Does Not Fit the Facts, Alter the Facts, Not the Interpretation!: A Comment on Pulvermüller and Schumann (1994)
  24. Language lateralization in bilinguals: Enough already!
  25. Linguistic Parameters in the Diagnosis of Dyslexia in Japanese and Chinese
  26. Selective crossed aphasia in a trilingual aphasic patient followed by reciprocal antagonism
  27. Recent developments in the study of agrammatism: Their import for the assessment of bilingual aphasia
  28. Introduction: Henry Hécaen and neurolinguistics
  29. Sobre la presentación de dos lenguajes en un cerebro
  30. On the representation of two languages in one brain
  31. Entrevista con michel paradis
  32. ASPECTS OF THE JAPANESE WRITING SYSTEM RELEVANT TO NEUROLINGUISTIC RESEARCH
  33. Aphasie et traduction
  34. La neurolinguistique du bilinguisme : représentation et traitement de deux langues dans un même cerveau
  35. Alternate antagonism with paradoxical translation behavior in two bilingual aphasic patients
  36. The bilingual brain
  37. Bilingualism and Aphasia
  38. The Neurofunctional Components of the Bilingual Cognitive System