Neurolinguistics: an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge [u.a.]
Cambridge Univ. Press.
2007
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Cambridge textbook in linguistics
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke |
Beschreibung: | XX, 420 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780521796408 9780521791908 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Neurolinguistics |b an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders |c John C. L. Ingram |
250 | |a 1. publ. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Cambridge [u.a.] |b Cambridge Univ. Press. |c 2007 | |
300 | |a XX, 420 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst. | ||
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650 | 7 | |a Neurolinguïstiek |2 gtt | |
650 | 7 | |a Spreektaal |2 gtt | |
650 | 4 | |a Neurolinguistics | |
650 | 4 | |a Speech perception | |
650 | 4 | |a Aphasia |x Etiology | |
650 | 4 | |a Human information processing | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137205702066176 |
---|---|
adam_text | Contents
List of figures PaSe xv
List of tables
xvii
Preface and acknowledgements
xix
Note on the text
xxi
Part I Foundational concepts and issues
1
Introduction and overview
3
Introduction
3
Co-evolution of language and the brain
5
An alternative view of co-evolution
7
Language areas in the brain
10
Aphasia as evidence of the brain s representation of language
11
The language faculty (localization and modularity)
12
2
Aspects of linguistic competence
15
Introduction
15
Forms and meanings
17
Minimal design features of a language
21
Phonology and syntax as aspects of form
23
Phonology: the sound patterns of spoken language
24
Prosody: the phonology of supra-segmental features
26
Semantics: the representation of meaning
30
Assertion/presupposition and clause structure
31
Specificity, reference and deixis
32
Thematic roles and case
34
Time reference: tense, aspect and modality
35
Concluding remarks
36
3
The neuroanatomy of language
40
Introduction
40
An orientation to the structures of the cerebral cortex
42
Discovery of the language areas
48
The classical account: the
Broca-
Wernicke-Lichtheim (BWL)
model
50
Non-localizationist views
55
Site of lesion studies
56
The neuropsychological perspective
57
Neural imaging
59
Contents
Metabolie
functional imaging
60
Encéphalographie
functional imaging
60
Magnetoencephalography
62
Combined imaging methods
63
The subtraction method
63
Summary: functional neural imaging
64
Postscript: linguistic structures and the neuroanatomy of
language
64
4
On modularity and method
66
Introduction
66
Chomskian modularity
68
Fodorian
modularity
69
Summary: Fodor s concept of modularity
72
Modularity uncoupled: Max s chocolate factory
73
Modularity and real-time processing
76
Real-time processing
77
The connectionist challenge
79
Connectionist architectures
80
Connectionist models and neural networks
82
Symbolic algorithms versus statistical processors
82
Hybrid models
83
Summarizing
84
Modularity of linguistic competence
85
Fodor s modularity of processing
88
Coltheart s functional modularity
89
Part II Speech perception and auditory processing
5
The problem of speech recognition
93
Introduction
93
Three aspects of word recognition
93
Speech signals, spectrograms and speech recognition
94
A simple model of speech recognition: phoneme
to sound matching
95
An alternative model: word to sound pattern-matching
96
Why speech recognition is difficult
96
The segmentation problem
96
The variability problem
97
The rate of information transmission in speech perception
100
Lexical retrieval in speech perception
101
Phonological parsing prior to lexical access
102
Phonetic forms and phonological representations
105
Under-specified (abstract) versus fully specified
(concrete) forms
108
Discrete (categorical) versus graded (continuous)
properties
108
Hierarchical organization versus entrainment
109
Summary
110
Contents
6 Speech
perception:
paradigms and findings
1
1
2
Introduction
112
The speech mode hypothesis
113
Strong and weak versions of the speech mode hypothesis
114
Dichotic listening
115
Categorical perception
117
Coarticulation effects and category boundary shifts
122
Duplex perception
123
Sine wave speech
125
Conclusions: is speech perception special?
126
Linguistic experience and phonological parsing
127
Tuning the auditory system: perceptual magnet effects
128
Prosodie
bootstrapping
129
Phonetic and phonological levels of processing in speech
recognition
132
Conclusions from the gating experiments
137
7
The speech recognition lexicon
140
Introduction
140
Search models of lexical retrieva)
142
The TRACE model
144
Architecture of TRACE
144
Lexical effects in TRACE
146
Empirical tests of the TRACE model
147
Modelling coarticulation effects and other
sequential dependencies
149
Modelling variability: a challenge for connectionist models?
152
Auditory-phonetic and phonological levels of representation
154
8
Disorders of auditory processing
155
Introduction
155
Flow-on effects of temporal sequencing deficit
157
Levels and types of auditory processing disorder
158
Clinical classification of auditory processing disorders
159
Disturbances of auditory-acoustic processing
160
Cortical deafness
161
Auditory agnosia
161
Auditory-acoustic processing deficits and aphasia
163
Effects of brain damage on phonetic feature extraction
164
Pure word deafness
164
Studies of prevalence of word-sound deafness
165
The nature of word-sound deafness 1
65
The neural basis for speech agnosia or pure word
deafness
168
Mirror neurons and the speech-motor loop
171
Disturbances in accessing the recognition lexicon
173
Summary
175
Contents
Part III Lexical semantics
9
Morphology and the mental lexicon
179
Introduction
179
Morphological decomposition in the mental lexicon
181
Psycholinguistic studies of word structure
184
Semantic and morphological relatedness
186
Priming effects of prefixes and suffixes
187
Conclusions from the
Marslen-
Wilson
et al.
study
188
Cross-linguistic generalizations on morphological processing
189
Neuroimaging studies of normal and
aphasie
morphological
processes
190
PET and MEG studies of morphological processing
190
Summary
196
10
Lexical semantics
199
Introduction
199
Semantic networks
201
Testing Quillian s model
204
Evaluation of
TLC
205
From word to sentence meanings
205
Conceptual dependency theory
207
Evaluation of symbolic models of lexical semantics
209
Investigating semantic structures
210
The role of context in word-sense disambiguation
211
Semantic priming and the activation/retrieval of word meaning
211
Results: associative and semantic priming and the effect of
prime type
214
Brain imaging studies of lexical semantic activation
215
Summary
219
11
Lexical semantic disorders in aphasia
221
Introduction
221
Early work
223
Competence or performance deficit in lexical semantic disorder?
225
Behavioural on-line measures of lexical access and organization
in aphasia
226
On-line lexical processing in Wernicke s aphasia
227
On-line lexical processing in Broca s aphasia
228
Lexical integration in aphasia
230
Category-specific semantic impairment
232
A case study of domain-specific semantic impairment
235
Explaining patterns of category-specific semantic impairment
237
Summary
238
Part IV Sentence comprehension
12
Sentence comprehension and syntactic parsing
243
Introduction
243
Contents
Syntactic processing and sentence comprehension
244
The grammar and the parser
245
Competing models of sentence processing
249
Asyntactic sentence comprehension: the case of agrammatism
250
Thematic role assignment and sentence comprehension
250
Reversible passive constructions
251
Canonical word order and thematic relations in complex
sentences
253
Strategies for processing complex sentences
254
Summary: grammatical heuristics and agrammatism
255
Ambiguity resolution and syntactic parsing strategies
256
Lexical and syntactic ambiguity
257
Why ambiguity is important for theories of language processing
258
Minimal attachment
259
Testing minimal attachment
261
Local ambiguities and garden path sentences
261
Summary
264
13
On-line processing, working memory and modularity
266
Introduction
266
Working memory, parsing and syntactic complexity
266
Individual differences in working memory capacity and sentence
processing
269
Modularity and VWMC
270
Sequential or parallel processing as a capacity effect
273
Syntactic complexity
275
Gibson s model of parsing complexity
276
Properties of Gibson^ parser
278
Summary and recapitulation
279
Syntactic trace reactivation
280
Load/capacity effects and the cross-modal lexical priming
paradigm
284
Recapitulation and summary: trace reactivation and the CMLP
paradigm
285
Neural imaging techniques and on-line sentence processing
286
Phrase structure and argument structure violations and ERPs
288
Jabberwocky sentence processing and ERPs
290
Deep and surface anaphora
291
General summary and conclusions
294
14
Agrammatism revisited
297
Introduction
297
Agrammatism revisited
299
Off-line methods of language comprehension assessment
300
A case for syntactic deficit in
Brocal
aphasia
301
A case against syntactic deficit in
ВгосаЧ
aphasia
304
Three theories of agrammatism
309
Weighing the evidence
312
Grammatieality judgement and sentence comprehension
312
Contents
Trace reactivation and on-line measures of sentence processing
317
Slow retrieval or under-activation of lexical items
319
Self-paced listening and transient processing load
320
ERP imaging of on-line sentence processing in aphasia
323
Summary and conclusion
324
Part V Discourse: language comprehension in context
15
Discourse processing
331
Introduction
331
Discourse modelling
332
Discourse construction: an example
333
Reference management and pragmatic knowledge
335
Relevance
336
Strong and weak implicature and relevance
337
Refining a model of discourse
338
Under-specification
339
Sentence-level discourse devices
339
Studies of discourse anaphora resolution
341
On-line studies of discourse anaphora
343
Summary
345
16
Breakdown of discourse
346
Introduction
346
Language and psychosis
349
Characteristics of thought disordered speech
350
A study of thought disordered speech
351
Cognitive impairment and thought disordered language
354
Summarizing the evidence on executive dysfunction in thought
disorder
359
Neurological models of thought disorder
361
The dopamine hypothesis
362
The cingulate modulation hypothesis
363
Conclusion
366
17
Conclusion and prospectus
367
Introduction
367
Connectionist models of language processing: a case study
367
Embodied cognition as a perspective on language processing
374
Concrete or abstract perceptual representations of speech sounds
377
Lexical retrieval mechanisms
378
Discourse structure and embodiment
378
Glossary
380
References
387
Index
414
Neurolinguistics
What biological factors make human communication poss¬
ible? How do we process and understand language? How does
brain damage affect these mechanisms, and what can this tell
us about how language is organized in the brain? The field
of neurolinguistics seeks to answer these questions, which
are crucial to linguistics, psychology and speech pathology
alike. Drawing on examples from everyday language, this
textbook introduces the central topics in neurolinguistics:
speech recognition, word and sentence structure, meaning,
and discourse
-
in both normal speakers and those with
language disorders. It moves on to provide a balanced dis¬
cussion of key areas of debate such as modularity and the
language areas of the brain, connectionist versus sym¬
bolic modelling of language processing, and the nature of
linguistic and mental representations. Making accessible over
half a century of scientific and linguistic research, and con¬
taining extensive study questions, it will be welcomed by all
those interested in the relationship between language and the
brain.
John c. L.
ingram
is Senior Lecturer on the Linguistics
Program at the University of Queensland. He has published
widely on speech and language disorders, sound change in
second language acquisition, phonetic variation in Australian
English, connected speech processes, acoustic phonetics, for¬
eign accent phenomena and forensic speaker identification.
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of figures PaSe xv
List of tables
xvii
Preface and acknowledgements
xix
Note on the text
xxi
Part I Foundational concepts and issues
1
Introduction and overview
3
Introduction
3
Co-evolution of language and the brain
5
An alternative view of co-evolution
7
Language areas in the brain
10
Aphasia as evidence of the brain's representation of language
11
The language faculty (localization and modularity)
12
2
Aspects of linguistic competence
15
Introduction
15
Forms and meanings
17
Minimal design features of a language
21
Phonology and syntax as aspects of form
23
Phonology: the sound patterns of spoken language
24
Prosody: the phonology of supra-segmental features
26
Semantics: the representation of meaning
30
Assertion/presupposition and clause structure
31
Specificity, reference and deixis
32
Thematic roles and case
34
Time reference: tense, aspect and modality
35
Concluding remarks
36
3
The neuroanatomy of language
40
Introduction
40
An orientation to the structures of the cerebral cortex
42
Discovery of the language areas
48
The classical account: the
Broca-
Wernicke-Lichtheim (BWL)
model
50
Non-localizationist views
55
Site of lesion studies
56
The neuropsychological perspective
57
Neural imaging
59
Contents
Metabolie
functional imaging
60
Encéphalographie
functional imaging
60
Magnetoencephalography
62
Combined imaging methods
63
The subtraction method
63
Summary: functional neural imaging
64
Postscript: linguistic structures and the neuroanatomy of
language
64
4
On modularity and method
66
Introduction
66
Chomskian modularity
68
Fodorian
modularity
69
Summary: Fodor's concept of modularity
72
Modularity uncoupled: Max's chocolate factory
73
Modularity and real-time processing
76
Real-time processing
77
The connectionist challenge
79
Connectionist architectures
80
Connectionist models and neural networks
82
Symbolic algorithms versus statistical processors
82
Hybrid models
83
Summarizing
84
Modularity of linguistic competence
85
Fodor's modularity of processing
88
Coltheart's functional modularity
89
Part II Speech perception and auditory processing
5
The problem of speech recognition
93
Introduction
93
Three aspects of word recognition
93
Speech signals, spectrograms and speech recognition
94
A simple model of speech recognition: phoneme
to sound matching
95
An alternative model: word to sound pattern-matching
96
Why speech recognition is difficult
96
The segmentation problem
96
The variability problem
97
The rate of information transmission in speech perception
100
Lexical retrieval in speech perception
101
Phonological parsing prior to lexical access
102
Phonetic forms and phonological representations
105
Under-specified (abstract) versus fully specified
(concrete) forms
108
Discrete (categorical) versus graded (continuous)
properties
108
Hierarchical organization versus entrainment
109
Summary
110
Contents
6 Speech
perception:
paradigms and findings
1
1
2
Introduction
112
The speech mode hypothesis
113
Strong and weak versions of the speech mode hypothesis
114
Dichotic listening
115
Categorical perception
117
Coarticulation effects and category boundary shifts
122
Duplex perception
123
Sine wave speech
125
Conclusions: is speech perception special?
126
Linguistic experience and phonological parsing
127
Tuning the auditory system: perceptual magnet effects
128
Prosodie
bootstrapping
129
Phonetic and phonological levels of processing in speech
recognition
132
Conclusions from the gating experiments
137
7
The speech recognition lexicon
140
Introduction
140
Search models of lexical retrieva)
142
The TRACE model
144
Architecture of TRACE
144
Lexical effects in TRACE
146
Empirical tests of the TRACE model
147
Modelling coarticulation effects and other
sequential dependencies
149
Modelling variability: a challenge for connectionist models?
152
Auditory-phonetic and phonological levels of representation
154
8
Disorders of auditory processing
155
Introduction
155
Flow-on effects of temporal sequencing deficit
157
Levels and types of auditory processing disorder
158
Clinical classification of auditory processing disorders
159
Disturbances of auditory-acoustic processing
160
Cortical deafness
161
Auditory agnosia
161
Auditory-acoustic processing deficits and aphasia
163
Effects of brain damage on phonetic feature extraction
164
Pure word deafness
164
Studies of prevalence of word-sound deafness
165
The nature of word-sound deafness 1
65
The neural basis for speech agnosia or pure word
deafness
168
Mirror neurons and the speech-motor loop
171
Disturbances in accessing the recognition lexicon
173
Summary
175
Contents
Part III Lexical semantics
9
Morphology and the mental lexicon
179
Introduction
179
Morphological decomposition in the mental lexicon
181
Psycholinguistic studies of word structure
184
Semantic and morphological relatedness
186
Priming effects of prefixes and suffixes
187
Conclusions from the
Marslen-
Wilson
et al.
study
188
Cross-linguistic generalizations on morphological processing
189
Neuroimaging studies of normal and
aphasie
morphological
processes
190
PET and MEG studies of morphological processing
190
Summary
196
10
Lexical semantics
199
Introduction
199
Semantic networks
201
Testing Quillian's model
204
Evaluation of
TLC
205
From word to sentence meanings
205
Conceptual dependency theory
207
Evaluation of symbolic models of lexical semantics
209
Investigating semantic structures
210
The role of context in word-sense disambiguation
211
Semantic priming and the activation/retrieval of word meaning
211
Results: associative and semantic priming and the effect of
prime type
214
Brain imaging studies of lexical semantic activation
215
Summary
219
11
Lexical semantic disorders in aphasia
221
Introduction
221
Early work
223
Competence or performance deficit in lexical semantic disorder?
225
Behavioural on-line measures of lexical access and organization
in aphasia
226
On-line lexical processing in Wernicke's aphasia
227
On-line lexical processing in Broca's aphasia
228
Lexical integration in aphasia
230
Category-specific semantic impairment
232
A case study of domain-specific semantic impairment
235
Explaining patterns of category-specific semantic impairment
237
Summary
238
Part IV Sentence comprehension
12
Sentence comprehension and syntactic parsing
243
Introduction
243
Contents
Syntactic processing and sentence comprehension
244
The grammar and the parser
245
Competing models of sentence processing
249
Asyntactic sentence comprehension: the case of agrammatism
250
Thematic role assignment and sentence comprehension
250
Reversible passive constructions
251
Canonical word order and thematic relations in complex
sentences
253
Strategies for processing complex sentences
254
Summary: grammatical heuristics and agrammatism
255
Ambiguity resolution and syntactic parsing strategies
256
Lexical and syntactic ambiguity
257
Why ambiguity is important for theories of language processing
258
Minimal attachment
259
Testing minimal attachment
261
Local ambiguities and garden path sentences
261
Summary
264
13
On-line processing, working memory and modularity
266
Introduction
266
Working memory, parsing and syntactic complexity
266
Individual differences in working memory capacity and sentence
processing
269
Modularity and VWMC
270
Sequential or parallel processing as a capacity effect
273
Syntactic complexity
275
Gibson's model of parsing complexity
276
Properties of Gibson^ parser
278
Summary and recapitulation
279
Syntactic trace reactivation
280
Load/capacity effects and the cross-modal lexical priming
paradigm
284
Recapitulation and summary: trace reactivation and the CMLP
paradigm
285
Neural imaging techniques and on-line sentence processing
286
Phrase structure and argument structure violations and ERPs
288
Jabberwocky sentence processing and ERPs
290
Deep and surface anaphora
291
General summary and conclusions
294
14
Agrammatism revisited
297
Introduction
297
Agrammatism revisited
299
Off-line methods of language comprehension assessment
300
A case for syntactic deficit in
Brocal
aphasia
301
A case against syntactic deficit in
ВгосаЧ
aphasia
304
Three theories of agrammatism
309
Weighing the evidence
312
Grammatieality judgement and sentence comprehension
312
Contents
Trace reactivation and on-line measures of sentence processing
317
Slow retrieval or under-activation of lexical items
319
Self-paced listening and transient processing load
320
ERP imaging of on-line sentence processing in aphasia
323
Summary and conclusion
324
Part V Discourse: language comprehension in context
15
Discourse processing
331
Introduction
331
Discourse modelling
332
Discourse construction: an example
333
Reference management and pragmatic knowledge
335
Relevance
336
Strong and weak implicature and relevance
337
Refining a model of discourse
338
Under-specification
339
Sentence-level discourse devices
339
Studies of discourse anaphora resolution
341
On-line studies of discourse anaphora
343
Summary
345
16
Breakdown of discourse
346
Introduction
346
Language and psychosis
349
Characteristics of thought disordered speech
350
A study of thought disordered speech
351
Cognitive impairment and thought disordered language
354
Summarizing the evidence on executive dysfunction in thought
disorder
359
Neurological models of thought disorder
361
The dopamine hypothesis
362
The cingulate modulation hypothesis
363
Conclusion
366
17
Conclusion and prospectus
367
Introduction
367
Connectionist models of language processing: a case study
367
Embodied cognition as a perspective on language processing
374
Concrete or abstract perceptual representations of speech sounds
377
Lexical retrieval mechanisms
378
Discourse structure and embodiment
378
Glossary
380
References
387
Index
414
Neurolinguistics
What biological factors make human communication poss¬
ible? How do we process and understand language? How does
brain damage affect these mechanisms, and what can this tell
us about how language is organized in the brain? The field
of neurolinguistics seeks to answer these questions, which
are crucial to linguistics, psychology and speech pathology
alike. Drawing on examples from everyday language, this
textbook introduces the central topics in neurolinguistics:
speech recognition, word and sentence structure, meaning,
and discourse
-
in both 'normal" speakers and those with
language disorders. It moves on to provide a balanced dis¬
cussion of key areas of debate such as modularity and the
'language areas' of the brain, 'connectionist' versus 'sym¬
bolic' modelling of language processing, and the nature of
linguistic and mental representations. Making accessible over
half a century of scientific and linguistic research, and con¬
taining extensive study questions, it will be welcomed by all
those interested in the relationship between language and the
brain.
John c. L.
ingram
is Senior Lecturer on the Linguistics
Program at the University of Queensland. He has published
widely on speech and language disorders, sound change in
second language acquisition, phonetic variation in Australian
English, connected speech processes, acoustic phonetics, for¬
eign accent phenomena and forensic speaker identification. |
any_adam_object | 1 |
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author | Ingram, John C. L. |
author_facet | Ingram, John C. L. |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Ingram, John C. L. |
author_variant | j c l i jcl jcli |
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format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV022959619 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T19:04:12Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:08:36Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780521796408 9780521791908 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016164004 |
oclc_num | 73954871 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-20 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-521 DE-11 DE-188 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-739 |
owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-20 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-521 DE-11 DE-188 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-739 |
physical | XX, 420 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Cambridge Univ. Press. |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Cambridge textbook in linguistics |
spelling | Ingram, John C. L. Verfasser aut Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders John C. L. Ingram 1. publ. Cambridge [u.a.] Cambridge Univ. Press. 2007 XX, 420 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Cambridge textbook in linguistics Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke Neurolinguïstiek gtt Spreektaal gtt Neurolinguistics Speech perception Aphasia Etiology Human information processing Neurolinguistik (DE-588)4041886-8 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Neurolinguistik (DE-588)4041886-8 s DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016164004&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016164004&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Ingram, John C. L. Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders Neurolinguïstiek gtt Spreektaal gtt Neurolinguistics Speech perception Aphasia Etiology Human information processing Neurolinguistik (DE-588)4041886-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4041886-8 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders |
title_auth | Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders |
title_exact_search | Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders |
title_exact_search_txtP | Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders |
title_full | Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders John C. L. Ingram |
title_fullStr | Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders John C. L. Ingram |
title_full_unstemmed | Neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders John C. L. Ingram |
title_short | Neurolinguistics |
title_sort | neurolinguistics an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders |
title_sub | an introduction to spoken language processing and its disorders |
topic | Neurolinguïstiek gtt Spreektaal gtt Neurolinguistics Speech perception Aphasia Etiology Human information processing Neurolinguistik (DE-588)4041886-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Neurolinguïstiek Spreektaal Neurolinguistics Speech perception Aphasia Etiology Human information processing Neurolinguistik Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016164004&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016164004&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT ingramjohncl neurolinguisticsanintroductiontospokenlanguageprocessinganditsdisorders |