The Representation of Language in the Brain: In Honour of John C. Marshall
A special issue of the journal Aphasiology
- Edited by Chris Code
- Price: $110.00 $99.00
- Binding: Hardback
- Pages: 368
- Published by: Psychology Press
- Publication Date: 2nd November 2006
- ISBN: 978-1-84169-817-5
About the Book
John C Marshall is one of the most influential neuropsychologists of his generation. His impact on the development of cognitive neuropsychology has been pivotal, particularly in the neuropsychology of language. This Festschrift in his honour brings together contributions from his colleagues and friends to celebrate this contribution and presents a comprehensive survey of contemporary and historical issues concerned with The Representation of Language in the Brain.
There are contributions on reading, naming, syntax, comprehension, foreign accent syndrome, progressive aphasia, the history of aphasia, treatment, the evolution of language, calculation and embodied cognition. The content reflects John’s own interests in language and aphasia, and it is therefore no wonder that it also reflects current and central issues in the neuropsychology of language.
Table of Contents
Chris Code & Claus-W. Wallesch, The Form of Representation of Language in the Brain and the Influence of John C. Marshall. Section I: READING & WRITING IMPAIRMENT. Alessio Toraldo, Barbara Cattani, Giusi Zonca, Paola Saletta & Claudio Luzzatti, Reading Disorders in a Language with Shallow Orthography: a Multiple Single-Case Study in Italian. Karen Sage & Andrew W. Ellis, Using Orthographic Neighbours to Treat a Case of Graphemic Buffer Disorder. Anne Castles, Timothy C. Bates & Max Coltheart, John Marshall and the Developmental Dyslexias. Section II: LANGUAGE PROCESSING IMPAIRMENTS. David Caplan, Gayle DeDe & Jennifer Michaud, Task-Independent and Task-Specific Syntactic Deficits in Aphasic Comprehension. David Howard & Claire Gatehouse, Distinguishing Semantic and Lexical Word Retrieval Deficits in People with Aphasia. Cinzia Di Dio, Joerg Schulz & Jennifer M. Gurd, Foreign Accent Syndrome: In the Ear of the Beholder? Elizabeth Jefferies, Jenni Crisp & Matthew A. Lambon Ralph, The Impact of Phonological or Semantic Impairment on Delayed Auditory Repetition: Evidence from Stroke Aphasia and Semantic Dementia. Judit Druks, Morpho-Syntactic and Morpho-Phonological Deficits in the Production of Regularly and Irregularly Inflected Verbs. Karalyn Pattersson, Naida L. Graham, Matthew A. Lambon Ralph & John R. Hodges, Progressive Non-Fluent Aphasia is not a Progressive Form of Non-fluent (Post-Stroke) Aphasia. Chris Code, Nicole Müller, Jeremy T. Tree & Martin J. Ball, Syntactic Impairments Can Emerge Later: Progressive Agrammatic Agraphia and Syntactic Comprehension Impairment. Section III: HISTORY OF APHASIA. Marjorie Perlman Lorch, Phrenology and Methodology, or "Playing Tennis with the Net Down". Paul Eling, The Psycholinguistic Approach to Aphasia of Chajim Steinthal. Hugh W. Buckingham, Was Sigmund Freud the First Neogrammarian Neurolinguist? Section IV: CALCULATION, GESTURE AND THE EVOLUTION OF LANGUAGE. Carlo Semenza, Alessia Grana & Luisa Girelli, On Knowing About Nothing: the Processing of Zero in Single and Multi-digit Multiplication. Daniel N. Bub & Michael E. J. Masson, Gestural Knowledge Evoked by Objects as Part of Conceptual Representations. Michael A. Arbib, Aphasia, Apraxia and the Evolution of the Language-Ready Brain
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