Book review
Norman Geschwind. Selected Papers on Language and the Brain. Dordrecht-Holland: D. Reidel, 1974. XII 549 pp.
References (31)
References
Brown, Jason. (1975) The problem of repetition: A study of “conduction” aphasia and the “isolation” syndrome. Cortex, 111, 37–52.
Buckingham, Hugh. (1976). The conduction theory and neologistic jargon. Quarterly Progress Report, 131, Communication Sciences Laboratory, University of Florida. To appear in Language and Speech.
Buckingham, Hugh and Andrew Kertesz. (1976) Neologistic jargon aphasia. The Netherlands: Zwets and Zeitlinger.
Caplan, David and John C. Marshall. (1975) Generative grammar and aphasic disorders: A theory of language representation in the human brain. Foundations of Language, 121, 583–96. (A review of Whitaker. 1971b).
Dubois, Jean, et al. (1973). Neurolinguistic study of conduction aphasia. In Goodglass and Blumstein (eds.) Psycholinguistics and aphasia. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Fodor, Jerry A., T. G. Bever and M. F. Garrett. (1974) The psychology of language: An introduction to psycholinguistics and generative grammar. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co.
Franz, S. I. (1912). New phrenology. Science, 351, 321–28.
Geschwind, Norman. (1969) Anatomy and the higher functions of the brain. in R. S. Cohen and W. M. Wartofsky (eds.) Boston studies in the philosophy of science. (Vol. IV1). Dordrecht-Holland: D. Reidel.
Goldstein, Kurt. (1948) Language and language disturbances. New York: Grune and Stratton.
Hutchinson, L. G. (1974). Grammar as theory. In David Cohen (ed.) Explaining linguistic phenomena. Washington, D. C.: Hemisphere Publishing Co.
Jackson, John Hughlings. (1931) Selected writings of John Hughlings Jackson. J. Taylor (ed.) London: Jodder and Stoughton. Vols. I and II1.
Katz, Jerrold J. (1964). Mentalism in linguistics. Language, 401, 124–37. Reprinted in L. Jakobovits and M. Miron (eds.) Readings in the Psychology of language. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, pp. 73–84.
Kertesz, Andrew and D. Frank Benson. (1970) Neologistic jargon: a clinicopathological study. Cortex, 61, 362–86.
Kinsbourne, Marcel. (1971) The minor cerebral hemisphere as a source of aphasic speech. Archives of Neurology, 251, 302–6.
Kinsbourne, Marcel. (1972). Behavioral analysis of the repetition dificit in conduction aphasia. Neurology, 221, 1126–32.
Lecours, A. R. and F. Lhermitte. (1972) Recherches sur le language des aphasiques: 4. Analyse d’un corpus de neologisme; notion de paraphasie menemique. l’Encephale, 611, 295–315.
Lenneberg, Eric H. (1967). Biological foundations of language. New York: John Wiley and Sons.
Luria, A. R. (1972). Aphasia reconsidered. Cortex, 81, 34–40.
McFie, J. (1961). Recent advances in phrenology. Lancet, 21, 360–63.
Moscovitch, Morris. (1976) On the representation of language in the right hemisphere of right-handed people. Brain and Language, 31, 47–71.
Sanides, Friedrich. (1975) Comparative neurology of the temporal lobe in primates including man with reference to speech. Brain and Language, 21, 398–419.
Schnitzer, Marc L. (1972). Generative phonology -- evidence from aphasia. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press.
Seines, Ola A. (1974). The corpus callosum: some anatomical and functional considerations with special reference to language. Brain and Language, 11, 111–39.
Strub, Richard L. and Howard Gardner. (1974) The repetition defect in conduction aphasia: mnestic or linguistic. Brain and Language, 11, 241–55.
Wada, Juhn, Robert Clark and Anne Hamm. (1975) Cerebral hemispheric asymmetry in humans. Archives of Neurology, 321, 239–46.
Warrington, E. K. and T. Shallice. (1969) The selective impairment of auditory verbal short-term memory. Brain, 921, 885–96.
Weigl, E. and M. Bierwisch. (1970) Neuropsychology and linguistics: topics of common research. Foundations of Language, 61, 1–18.
Whitaker, Harry A. (1971a) Neurolinguistics. In W. O. Dingwall (ed.) A survey of linguistic science. College Park: Linguistics Program, University of Maryland.
Whitaker, Harry A. (1971b) On the representation of language in the human brain. Edmonton, Canada: Linguistics Research, Inc.
Whitaker, Harry A. (1974). Is the grammar in the brain? In David Cohen (ed.) Explaining linguistic phenomena. Washington, D. C.: Hemisphere Publishing Co.
Wilbur, R. B., S. P. Quigley and D. S. Montanelli. (1975) Conjoined structures in the language of deaf students. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 181, 319–35.
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Buckingham, Hugh W.
1981.
Aphasia and associated disorders: Taxonomy, localization, and recovery.
Brain and Language 12:2
► pp. 387 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 18 july 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.