目錄
Contributors
Preface
CORINE ASTESANO AND MELANIE JUCLA
Acknowledgements
Foreword
DAVID N. CAPLAN
Introduction
1 NeuropsychoUnguistics according to Jean-Luc Nespoulous
PART 1 Linguistic mechanisms and the architecture of language
2 Phonological markedness, acquisition and language pathology: What is left of the Jakobsonian legacy?
3 Function versus regions in spatial language:A fundamental distinction
4 From language acquisition to language pathology:Cross-linguistic perspectives
5 Semantic subcategories of nouns and verbs:A neurolinguistic review on healthy adults and patients with Alzheimer's disease
PART 2 The relationship between language and other cognitive processes
6 Phonological similarity can also impair transcoding:A study in French
7 Influence of musical expertise on the perception of pitch, duration and intensity variations in speech and harmonic sounds
8 Gestures and multimodal communication:Developmental and pathological aspects
9 Cognitive processes underlying pragmatic impairments after a right-hemisphere lesion
PART 3 Assessment of speech & language disabilities and compensatory mechanisms
10 Describing and interpreting variability in agrammatic speech production
11 Disability, repair strategies and communicative effectiveness at the phonic level: Evidence from a multiple-case study
12 Applying phonetic investigation methods to the assessment of dysphonia and dysarthria
13 Allying information and communications technology with (psycho)linguistic sciences to design alternative and augmentative communication systems for
persons with speech and motor impairment
Appendix 6.1
Index