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e1
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Editorial Board/Title Page
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i
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Contents
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iii-iv
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| Editorial |
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Cortex aims and vision
12 December 2011
Cortex was created in 1964 by Ennio De Renzi and a group of scientists of the “Milan group” supported by a strong international editorial board, including most of the founders of modern neuropsycholog...
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293
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| Research Reports |
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“Are there lexicons?” A study of lexical and semantic processing in word-meaning deafness suggests “yes”
15 July 2011
Abstract: A controversial issue in the cognitive neuroscience of language is the question whether independent lexical representations need to be included in cognitive models. Recent models claim to ac...
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Tobias Bormann,
Cornelius Weiller
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294-307
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Receptive prosody in nonfluent primary progressive aphasias
03 November 2010
Abstract: Introduction: Prosody has been little studied in the primary progressive aphasias (PPAs), a group of neurodegenerative disorders presenting with progressive language impairment. Methods: Her...
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Jonathan D. Rohrer,
Disa Sauter,
Sophie Scott,
Martin N. Rossor,
Jason D. Warren
et al.
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308-316
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Long-term accelerated forgetting of verbal and non-verbal information in temporal lobe epilepsy
14 March 2011
Abstract: Introduction: We investigated whether pre-surgical patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) forget verbal and non-verbal material faster than healthy controls over retention intervals of a...
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Heather Wilkinson,
Juliet S. Holdstock,
Gus Baker,
Andrea Herbert,
Fiona Clague,
John J. Downes
et al.
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317-332
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Two means of suppressing visual awareness: A direct comparison of visual masking and transcranial magnetic stimulation
13 January 2011
Abstract: Visual masking and visual suppression by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) are both widely utilized in cognitive neuroscience to investigate a wide range of processes. However, the neu...
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Henry Railo,
Mika Koivisto
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333-343
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Covert face recognition in congenital prosopagnosia: A group study
17 February 2011
Abstract: Introduction: Even though people with congenital prosopagnosia (CP) never develop a normal ability to “overtly” recognize faces, some individuals show indices of “covert” (or implicit) face ...
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Davide Rivolta,
Romina Palermo,
Laura Schmalzl,
Max Coltheart
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344-352
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| Letters to the Editor |
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Neuropsychology is nothing without control: A potential fallacy hidden in clinical studies
25 July 2011
The need of appropriate methodological approaches in cognitive neuropsychology has been repeatedly addressed for over 30years. Most of the debate has focused on whether single-case or group studies ar...
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Mario Bonato,
Francesco Sella,
Ilaria Berteletti,
Carlo Umiltà
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353-355
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Graphabulation: A graphic form of confabulation
16 June 2011
Confabulation refers to “spontaneous ‘narrative’ reports of events that never happened” in patients with amnesia (). Falsification of stories is the main characteristic of confabulation, and the degre...
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Jee H. Roh,
Byung H. Lee,
Juhee Chin,
Geon H. Kim,
Duk L. Na
et al.
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356-359
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Specialization among the specialized: Auditory brainstem function is tuned in to timbre
03 May 2011
Evidence has mounted documenting widespread musician enhancements in an evolutionarily ancient subcortical structure, the auditory brainstem, highlighting the brainstem as a structure involved in lear...
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Dana L. Strait,
Karen Chan,
Richard Ashley,
Nina Kraus
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360-362
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| Discussion Forum |
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Picture–word interference and the response–exclusion hypothesis
01 June 2011
In the picture–word interference (PWI) task, a variant of the Stroop task, pictures are presented, one at a time, along with a superimposed distractor word. Participants are instructed to name the pic...
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Claudio Mulatti,
Max Coltheart
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363-372
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Picture–word interference and the Response-Exclusion Hypothesis: A response to Mulatti and Coltheart
30 November 2011
In order for a manipulation of the speed of processing of the distractor (e.g., distractor frequency) to affect the time the response to the target accesses the buffer, it is necessary that the respon...
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Bradford Z. Mahon,
Frank E. Garcea,
Eduardo Navarrete
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373-377
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| Quotes and Titbits |
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Paradoxes of the mind
21 July 2011
The word paradox is derived from the Greek: the prefix para means contrary or opposed, and doxos means opinion. The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary includes amongst its definitions of paradox ‘a see...
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Narinder Kapur
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378-381
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| Book and New Media Review |
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The emerging neuroscience of hypnosis
22 September 2011
In recent years, hypnosis has begun to gain traction as a potentially valuable tool in the increasingly diverse repertoires of cognitive neuroscience and cognitive neuropsychiatry (). Hypnosis consist...
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Devin Blair Terhune,
Roi Cohen Kadosh
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382-386
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