Update: February 24, 2023 The new version of Termout.org is now online, so this web site is now obsolete and will soon be dismantled. |
aphasia |
: Ahmed, S., de Jager, C. A., Haigh, A. M. & Garrard, P. (2012). Logopenic aphasia in Alzheimer’s disease: Clinical variant or clinical feature? Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 83(11), 1056-1062. : Amici, S., Gorno-Tempini, M. L., Ogar, J. M., Dronkers, N. F. & Miller, B. L. (2006). An overview on primary progressive aphasia and its variants. Behavioural Neurology, 17(2), 77-87. : Bisenius, S., Neumann, J. & Schroeter, M. L. (2016). Validating new diagnostic imaging criteria for primary progressive aphasia via anatomical likelihood estimation meta-analyses. European Journal of Neurology, 23(4), 704-712. : Chapman, S. B., Highley, A. P. & Thompson, J. L. (1998). Discourse in fluent aphasia and Alzheimer’s disease: Linguistic and pragmatic considerations. Journal of Neurolinguistics: Special Issue, 11, 55-78. : Chapman, S. B., Ulatowska, H. K., Franklin, L. R., Shobe, A. E., Thompson, J. L. & McIntire, D. D. (1997). Proverb interpretation in fluent aphasia and Alzheimer’s disease: Implications beyond abstract thinking. Aphasiology, 11(4-5), 337-350. : Crockford, C. & Lesser, R. (1994). Assessing functional communication in aphasia: Clinical utility and time demands of three methods. European Journal of Disorders of Communication, 29, 165-182. : Duffy, J. R., Strand, E.A. & Josephs, K. A. (2014). Motor speech disorders associated with primary progressive aphasia, Aphasiology, 28(8-9), 1004-1017. : Gorno-Tempini, M. L., Dronkers, N. F., Rankin, K. P., Ogar, J. M., Phengrasamy, L., Rosen, H. J., Johnson, J. K., Weiner, M. W. & Miller, B. L. (2004). Cognition and anatomy in three variants of primary progressive aphasia. Annals of Neurology, 55(3), 335-346. : Grossman, M. (2010). Primary progressive aphasia: Clinicopathological correlations. Nature Reviews Neurology, 6(2), 88-97. : Hoffman, P., Sajjadi, S. A., Patterson, K. & Nestor, P. J. (2017). Data-driven classification of patients with primary progressive aphasia. Brain and Language, 174, 86-93. : Huber, W. & Gleber, H. (1982). Linguistic and nonlinguistic processing of narratives in aphasia. Brain and Language, 16, 1-18. : Kong, A. P. H., Linnik, A., Law, S. P. & Shum, W. W. M. (2017). Measuring discourse coherence in anomic aphasia using Rhetorical Structure Theory. International journal of speech-language pathology, 20(4), 406-421. : Leyton, C. E. & Ballard, K. J. (2016). Primary progressive aphasia: Conceptual evolution and challenges. Neuroscience and Neuroeconomics, 5, 9-18. : Mesulam, M. M. (1982). Slowly progressive aphasia without generalized dementia. Annals of Neurology, 11(6), 592-598. : Mesulam, M. M. (2016). Primary Progressive Aphasia and the Left Hemisphere Language Network. Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders, 15(4), 93-102. : Mesulam, M. M., Rogalski, E. J., Wieneke, C., Hurley, R. S., Geula, C., Bigio, E. H., Thompson, C. K. & Weintraub, S. (2014). Primary progressive aphasia and the evolving neurology of the language network. Nature Reviews Neurology, 10(10), 554-569. : Migliaccio, R., Boutet, C., Valabregue, R., Ferrieux, S., Nogues, M., Lehéricy, S., Dormont, D., Levy, R., Dubois, B. & Teichmann, M. (2016). The brain network of naming: A lesson from primary progressive aphasia. PloS one, 11(2). : Nicholas, M., Obler, L. K., Albert, M. L. & Helm-Estabrooks, N. (1985). Empty speech in Alzheimer’s disease and fluent aphasia. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 28(3), 405-410. : Papathanasiou, I., Coppens, P. & Potagas, C. (2013). Aphasia and related Neurogenic Communication Disorders. Burlington: Jones & Bartlett Learning. : Poole, M. L., Brodtmann, A., Darby, D. & Vogel, A. P. (2017). Motor Speech Phenotypes of Frontotemporal Dementia, Primary Progressive Aphasia, and Progressive Apraxia of Speech. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 60(4), 897-911. : Rogalski, E. & Mesulam, M. M. (2007). An update on primary progressive aphasia. Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 7(5), 388-392. : Semenza, C., Denes, G., Lucchese, D. & Bisiacchi, P. (1980). Selective deficit of conceptual structures in aphasia: Class versus thematic relations.Brain and Language,10(2), 243-248. : Thompson, C. K., Cho, S., Hsu, C. J., Wieneke, C., Rademaker, A., Weitner, B. B., Mesulam, M. M. & Weintraub, S. (2012). Dissociations between fluency and agrammatism in primary progressive aphasia. Aphasiology, 26(1), 20-43. : Thompson, C., Shapiro, L., Ballord, K., Jacobs, B., Schneider, S. & Tait, M. (1997). Training and Generalized Production of Wh- and NP- Movement Structures in Agrammatic Aphasia. Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research, 40, 228-244. : Vivas, L., García García, R., Perea Bartolomé, M. V., Leite D’almeida, A. & Ladera Fernández, V. (2016). Recognition of thematic and taxonomic conceptual relations in patients with aphasia. Aphasiology, 30(6), 657-677. : Win, K. T., Pluta, J., Yushkevich, P., Irwin, D. J., McMillan, C. T., Rascovsky, K., Wolk, D. & Grossman, M. (2017). Neural correlates of verbal episodic memory and lexical retrieval in Logopenic Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 11,330. : ^3Adaptado de ‘Primary progressive aphasia and the evolving neurology of the language network’ por Mesulam et al., 2014, Nature Reviews Neurology, 10(10), 554-569. |