Access of Phonological and Orthographic Lexical Forms: Evidence From Dissociations In Reading And Spelling
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Access of Phonological and Orthographic Lexical Forms: Evidence From Dissociations In Reading And Spelling (1997)
EN HC
ISBN: 9780863779602 bzw. 0863779603, in Englisch, Psychology Press, Hove, gebundenes Buch.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, George Longden [7699994], Macclesfield, United Kingdom.
Good. Marginal notes and brief underlining in red ink on p.27 and 30. Some small bumps to fore-edge. Pink background colour is unevenly faded over the spine and boards. Lettering remains distinct. Glazed boards. No dustjacket. A special issue of "Cognitive Neuropsychology". 210pp.
Good. Marginal notes and brief underlining in red ink on p.27 and 30. Some small bumps to fore-edge. Pink background colour is unevenly faded over the spine and boards. Lettering remains distinct. Glazed boards. No dustjacket. A special issue of "Cognitive Neuropsychology". 210pp.
2
Access Of Phonological And Orthographic Lexical Forms: Evidence From Dissociations In Reading And Spelling (1997)
EN US FE
ISBN: 9780863779602 bzw. 0863779603, in Englisch, 214 Seiten, Psychology Press, gebraucht, Erstausgabe.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Usually ships in 1-2 business days, Real shipping costs can differ.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, txm7105.
This special issue of Cognitive Neuropsychology is dedicated to a problem of considerable current interest: the role of phonology in orthographic lexical access. This problem has been the focus of much discussion in the normal literature, but has received only scant attention in cognitive neuropsychology. The standard position in cognitive neuropsychology has been that phonological mediation is not necessary (but may play a role) in orthographic lexical access. Why this difference in the two literatures? The reason seems to be quite simple, if not entirely justifiable. In the case of spelling, for example, the fact that in some brain-damaged subjects the ability to spell is often preserved even though phonological production may be quite severely impaired has been interpreted as indicating that spelling does not require phonological mediation. However, in order to reach this conclusion it would have to be shown that the phonological deficit in these subjects is not at a level of processing subsequent to the point where phonological mediation might take place, and this precaution has not always been faithfully observed. Thus, it is of considerable value to collect in one place reports that purport unambiguously to resolve the issue of phonological mediation in orthographic lexical access. Seven papers are included in this issue. Four of them (Hanley and McDonnell, Miceli, Benvegnù, Capasso and Caramazza, Rapp, Benzing and Caramazza, Shelton and Weinrich) report case studies purportedly showing that phonological mediation is not necessary in orthographic lexical access. The empirical reports are followed by commentaries by Van Order, Jansen op de Haar, and Bosman and by M. Coltheart and V. Coltheart on the issue of phonological mediation in reading, and a paper by Caramazza that interprets the patterns of dissociations and associations of lexical errors in speaking and writing as providing evidence against the existence of a modality-neutral level of lexical representation (lemma). Library Binding, Edition: 1, Label: Psychology Press, Psychology Press, Product group: Book, Published: 1997-05-01, Studio: Psychology Press, Sales rank: 17040247.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, txm7105.
This special issue of Cognitive Neuropsychology is dedicated to a problem of considerable current interest: the role of phonology in orthographic lexical access. This problem has been the focus of much discussion in the normal literature, but has received only scant attention in cognitive neuropsychology. The standard position in cognitive neuropsychology has been that phonological mediation is not necessary (but may play a role) in orthographic lexical access. Why this difference in the two literatures? The reason seems to be quite simple, if not entirely justifiable. In the case of spelling, for example, the fact that in some brain-damaged subjects the ability to spell is often preserved even though phonological production may be quite severely impaired has been interpreted as indicating that spelling does not require phonological mediation. However, in order to reach this conclusion it would have to be shown that the phonological deficit in these subjects is not at a level of processing subsequent to the point where phonological mediation might take place, and this precaution has not always been faithfully observed. Thus, it is of considerable value to collect in one place reports that purport unambiguously to resolve the issue of phonological mediation in orthographic lexical access. Seven papers are included in this issue. Four of them (Hanley and McDonnell, Miceli, Benvegnù, Capasso and Caramazza, Rapp, Benzing and Caramazza, Shelton and Weinrich) report case studies purportedly showing that phonological mediation is not necessary in orthographic lexical access. The empirical reports are followed by commentaries by Van Order, Jansen op de Haar, and Bosman and by M. Coltheart and V. Coltheart on the issue of phonological mediation in reading, and a paper by Caramazza that interprets the patterns of dissociations and associations of lexical errors in speaking and writing as providing evidence against the existence of a modality-neutral level of lexical representation (lemma). Library Binding, Edition: 1, Label: Psychology Press, Psychology Press, Product group: Book, Published: 1997-05-01, Studio: Psychology Press, Sales rank: 17040247.
3
Symbolbild
Access of Phonological and Orthographic Lexical Forms: Evidence From Dissociations in Reading and Spelling (1997)
EN HC US
ISBN: 9780863779602 bzw. 0863779603, in Englisch, Psychology Press, gebundenes Buch, gebraucht.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, plus shipping, Shipping area: DOM.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Spin Me Round, NJ, Phillipsburg, [RE:5].
Pages in excellent condition-We ship fast-minor wear-, Library Binding.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Spin Me Round, NJ, Phillipsburg, [RE:5].
Pages in excellent condition-We ship fast-minor wear-, Library Binding.
4
Symbolbild
Access Of Phonological And Orthographic Lexical Forms: Evidence From Dissociations In Reading And Spelling (1997)
EN US
ISBN: 9780863779602 bzw. 0863779603, in Englisch, Psychology Press, gebraucht.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Shipping costs to: USA.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Ergodebooks.
Psychology Press, 1997-05-01. Library Binding. Good.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Ergodebooks.
Psychology Press, 1997-05-01. Library Binding. Good.
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