Browsing by Issue Date

Jump to a point in the index:
Showing results 1 to 20 of 22470  next >
Issue DateTitleAuthor(s)
1Production of Stress Retraction by Left- and Right-Hemisphere-Damaged PatientsCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
1Pulmonary metastases from colorectal cancer: 25 years of experience-
1Contextual Influences on Phonetic Identification in Aphasia: The Effects of Speaking Rate and Semantic BiasCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
1Optimal discretization based adaptive finite element analysis for electromagnetics with vector tetrahedra-
2An expanding role for cardiopulmonary bypass in trauma-
2Causes of increased length of hospitalization on a general thoracic surgery service: a prospective observational study-
2Word recognition in individuals with left and right hemisphere damage: The role of lexical stressCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
2Evidence for Age-Related Equivalence in the Directed Forgetting Paradigm-
2Sensitivity to sub-syllabic constituents in brain-damaged patients: evidence from word gamesCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
3Impaired processing of prosodic and musical patterns after right hemisphere damageCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
3Age differences in the influence of metrical structure on phonetic identificationCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
3Sensitivity to local sentence context information in lexical ambiguity resolution: Evidence from left- and right-hemisphere-damaged individualsCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
3Reversible changes in protein phosphorylation during germinal vesicle breakdown and pronuclear formation in bovine oocytes in vitroChian, R.C.; Downey, B.R.; Sirard, M.A.; Chung, J.T.; Niwa, K.
3Sensitivity to prosodic structure in left- and right-hemisphere-damaged individualsCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
4Improved visualisation of the design space using nested performance charts-
4Prosodic processing post traumatic brain injury - a systematic reviewCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
5Processing homonymy and polysemy: effects of sentential context and time-course following unilateral brain damageCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
5Hemispheric contributions to lexical ambiguity resolution in a discourse context: Evidence from individuals with unilateral left and right hemisphere lesionsCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
5Unilateral brain damage effects on processing homonymous and polysemous wordsCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music
5Research note: The ability of individuals with right-hemisphere damage to use context under conditions of focused and divided attentionCentre for Research on Brain, Language and Music