Linguistics 411 — Readings



Readings in Neurolinguistics

for Linguistics 411, Rice University, 2006

1. Lamb, Sydney, Introducing the Brain. Chapter 16 of Pathways of the Brain: The Neurocognitive Basis of Language. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1999

2. Benson, D. Frank & Alfredo Ardila, Historical Background. Chapter 2 of Aphasia: A Clinical Perspecive. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996.

3. Goodglass, Harold, Disorders of Repetition. Chapter 8 of Understanding Aphasia. San Diego: Academic Press, 1993.

4. Damasio, Antonio, Signs of Aphasia. Chapter 2 of Acquired Aphasia (ed. Martha Taylor Sarno), 3rd edition,. Academic Press, 1998.

5. Benson, D. Frank & Alfredo Ardila, Perisylvian Aphasic Syndromes. Chapter 8 of Aphasia: A Clinical Perspecive. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996.

6. Goodglass, Harold, Cerebral Dominance and Laterality. Pages 55-60 of Understanding Aphasia. San Diego: Academic Press, 1993.

7. Damasio, Hannah, Neuroanatomical Correlates of the Aphasias. Chapter 3 of Acquired Aphasia (Ed. Martha Talor Sarno). San Diego: Academic Press, 1998.

8. Goodglass, Harold, Disorders of Syntax and Morphology. Chapter 6 of Understanding Aphasia. San Diego: Academic Press, 1993.

9. Rapp, Brenda C. & Alphonso Caramazza, Disorders of Lexical Processing and the Lexicon. Chapter 58 of The Cognitive Neurosciences, (ed. Michael S. Gazzaniga). Cambridge: The MIT Press, 1995.

10. Tranel, Daniel, Christine G. Logan, Randall J. Frank & Antonio R. Damasio, Explaining category-related effects in the retrieval of conceptual and lexical knowledge for concrete entities: operationalization and analysis of factors. Neuropsychologia 35.1329-1339, 1997.

11. Gazzaniga, Michael, Richard B. OIvry & George R. Mangun, Imaging the Healthy Brain. Cognitive Science: The Biology of the Mind. Norton, 1998.

12 Lamb, Sydney, Dimensions of the Territory of Neurolinguistics. Chapter 16 of Language and Reality (ed. Jonathan Webster). London: Continuum, 2004.

13. Pulvermüller, Friedemann, Neuronal Structure and Function. Chapter 2 of The Neuroscience of Language. Cambridge University Press, 2002.

14. Goodhill, Geoffrey and Miguel Á. Carreira-Peripiñán, Cortical Columns. Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, MacMillan, 2002.

15. Lamb, Sydney, Language and Brain: When experiments are unfeasible, you have to think harder. Linguistics and the Human Sciences 1.151-176 (2005)

16. Lamb, Sydney, The Anatomy of Language. Chapter 18 of Pathways of the Brain: The Neurocognitive Basis of Language. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1999.

17. Lamb, Sydney, Local and Distributed Representation in Network Models of Linguistic and Conceptual Structure. LACUS FORUM XXV, 1999.

18. Novak, Barbra and Sydney M. Lamb, Nouns and Verbs in the Mental Lexicon. Memory and Language (Cornelia Zelinsky, ed.), in press.

19. Beeman, Mark, Coarse Semantic Coding and Discourse Comprehension. Right Hemisphere Language Comprehension: Perspecives from Cognitive Neuroscience (eds. Mark Beeman & Christine Chiarello). Mahwah & London: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1998.

20. Lamb, Sydney, On the Perception of Speech. Language and Relity. (ed. Jonathan Webster). Continuum, 2004.

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