47 results on '"Jefferies, Elizabeth"'
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2. Damage to temporoparietal cortex is sufficient for impaired semantic control
3. Individual differences in gradients of intrinsic connectivity within the semantic network relate to distinct aspects of semantic cognition
4. Impaired emotion perception and categorization in semantic aphasia
5. Intrinsic connectivity of anterior temporal lobe relates to individual differences in semantic retrieval for landmarks
6. Controlled semantic summation correlates with intrinsic connectivity between default mode and control networks
7. Word up – Experiential and neurocognitive evidence for associations between autistic symptomology and a preference for thinking in the form of words
8. Linking individual differences in semantic cognition to white matter microstructure
9. Consistently inconsistent: Multimodal episodic deficits in semantic aphasia
10. Dissociations in semantic cognition: Oscillatory evidence for opposing effects of semantic control and type of semantic relation in anterior and posterior temporal cortex
11. Control the source: Source memory for semantic, spatial and self-related items in patients with LIFG lesions
12. Reduced semantic control in older adults is linked to intrinsic DMN connectivity
13. Emotion and location cues bias conceptual retrieval in people with deficient semantic control
14. rTMS evidence for a dissociation in short-term memory for spoken words and nonwords
15. Shared processes resolve competition within and between episodic and semantic memory: Evidence from patients with LIFG lesions
16. Dynamic semantic cognition: Characterising coherent and controlled conceptual retrieval through time using magnetoencephalography and chronometric transcranial magnetic stimulation
17. Individual variation in the propensity for prospective thought is associated with functional integration between visual and retrosplenial cortex
18. Task-based and resting-state fMRI reveal compensatory network changes following damage to left inferior frontal gyrus
19. A role for consolidation in cross-modal category learning
20. Semantic control deficits impair understanding of thematic relationships more than object identity
21. Newly-acquired words are more phonologically robust in verbal short-term memory when they have associated semantic representations
22. Charting the effects of TMS with fMRI: Modulation of cortical recruitment within the distributed network supporting semantic control
23. The role of the right hemisphere in semantic control: A case-series comparison of right and left hemisphere stroke
24. Disorders of representation and control in semantic cognition: Effects of familiarity, typicality, and specificity
25. Conceptual control across modalities: graded specialisation for pictures and words in inferior frontal and posterior temporal cortex
26. tDCS to temporoparietal cortex during familiarisation enhances the subsequent phonological coherence of nonwords in immediate serial recall
27. TMS interferes with lexical-semantic retrieval in left inferior frontal gyrus and posterior middle temporal gyrus: Evidence from cyclical picture naming
28. Semantic control and modality: An input processing deficit in aphasia leading to deregulated semantic cognition in a single modality
29. The neural basis of semantic cognition: Converging evidence from neuropsychology, neuroimaging and TMS
30. Deficits of semantic control produce absent or reverse frequency effects in comprehension: Evidence from neuropsychology and dual task methodology
31. Paced reading in semantic dementia: Word knowledge contributes to phoneme binding in rapid speech production
32. Premorbid expertise produces category-specific impairment in a domain-general semantic disorder
33. Phonological learning in semantic dementia
34. Explaining semantic short-term memory deficits: Evidence for the critical role of semantic control
35. Amodal semantic representations depend on both anterior temporal lobes: Evidence from repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation
36. “Pre-semantic” cognition revisited: Critical differences between semantic aphasia and semantic dementia
37. Exploring multimodal semantic control impairments in semantic aphasia: Evidence from naturalistic object use
38. The role of the anterior temporal lobes in the comprehension of concrete and abstract words: rTMS evidence
39. Corrigendum to “Emotion and location cues bias conceptual retrieval in people with deficient semantic control” [Neuropsychologia 131 (2019) 294–305]
40. Semantic memory is key to binding phonology: Converging evidence from immediate serial recall in semantic dementia and healthy participants
41. Deficits of knowledge versus executive control in semantic cognition: Insights from cued naming
42. Do deep dyslexia, dysphasia and dysgraphia share a common phonological impairment?
43. Refractory effects in stroke aphasia: A consequence of poor semantic control
44. The role of the temporal lobe semantic system in number knowledge: evidence from late-stage semantic dementia
45. A category-specific advantage for numbers in verbal short-term memory: Evidence from semantic dementia
46. Corrigendum to ‘Word up–experiential and neurocognitive evidence for associations between autistic symptomology and a preference for thinking in the form of words’ [Cortex 128 (2020) 88–106]
47. Remembering ‘zeal’ but not ‘thing’: Reverse frequency effects as a consequence of deregulated semantic processing
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