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Jean K. Gordon
Jean K. Gordon
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Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
A neural signature of phonological access: distinguishing the effects of word frequency from familiarity and length in overt picture naming
WW Graves, TJ Grabowski, S Mehta, JK Gordon
Journal of cognitive neuroscience 19 (4), 617-631, 2007
2162007
Neighbors in the lexicon: Friends or foes
GS Dell, JK Gordon
Phonetics and phonology in language comprehension and production …, 2003
1862003
Phonological neighborhood effects in aphasic speech errors: Spontaneous and structured contexts
JK Gordon
Brain and language 82 (2), 113-145, 2002
1672002
Learning to divide the labor: An account of deficits in light and heavy verb production
JK Gordon, GS Dell
Cognitive Science 27 (1), 1-40, 2003
1642003
Models of errors of omission in aphasic naming
GS Dell, EN Lawler, HD Harris, JK Gordon
Cognitive Neuropsychology 21 (2-4), 125-145, 2004
1612004
The fluency dimension in aphasia
JK Gordon
Aphasiology 12 (7-8), 673-688, 1998
831998
Measuring the lexical semantics of picture description in aphasia
JK Gordon
Aphasiology 22 (7-8), 839-852, 2008
722008
The ability of right-and left-hemisphere-damaged individuals to produce and interpret prosodic cues marking phrasal boundaries
SR Baum, MD Pell, CL Leonard, JK Gordon
Language and Speech 40 (4), 313-330, 1997
711997
Why do older adults have difficulty with semantic fluency?
JK Gordon, M Young, C Garcia
Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition 25 (6), 803-828, 2018
622018
A quantitative production analysis of picture description
JK Gordon
Aphasiology 20 (02-04), 188-204, 2006
582006
Platform Session 2: The Lexicon Phonological Neighborhood Effects: Evidence from Aphasia and Connectionist Modeling
JK Gordon, GS Dell
Brain and Language (Full Text) 79, 21-23, 2001
572001
The ageing neighbourhood: phonological density in naming
JK Gordon, JC Kurczek
Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 29 (3), 326-344, 2014
462014
Rhyme priming in aphasia: The role of phonology in lexical access
JK Gordon, SR Baum
Brain and Language 47 (4), 661-683, 1994
451994
Fluent or nonfluent? Part A. Underlying contributors to categorical classifications of fluency in aphasia
S Clough, JK Gordon
Aphasiology 34 (5), 515-539, 2020
412020
Word retrieval in ageing: An exploration of the task constraint hypothesis
JK Gordon, NK Kindred
Aphasiology 25 (6-7), 774-788, 2011
412011
Understanding elderspeak: an evolutionary concept analysis
CA Shaw, JK Gordon
Innovation in aging 5 (3), igab023, 2021
302021
Demystifying the complexity of aphasia treatment: application of the rehabilitation treatment specification systemx
J Fridriksson, A Basilakos, M Boyle, LR Cherney, G DeDe, JK Gordon, ...
Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 103 (3), 574-580, 2022
262022
How fluent? Part B. Underlying contributors to continuous measures of fluency in aphasia
JK Gordon, S Clough
Aphasiology 34 (5), 643-663, 2020
252020
Older is wiser? It depends who you ask… and how you ask
JK Gordon, LM Jordan
Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition 24 (1), 94-114, 2017
212017
Using prosody to resolve temporary syntactic ambiguities in speech production: acoustic data on brain-damaged speakers
SR Baum, MD Pell, CL Leonard, JK Gordon
clinical linguistics & phonetics 15 (6), 441-456, 2001
212001
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