Jennifer E Mack
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Explore the profile of Jennifer E Mack including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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17
Citations
244
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Recent Articles
11.
Meltzer-Asscher A, Mack J, Barbieri E, Thompson C
Brain Lang
. 2015 Feb;
142:65-75.
PMID: 25658635
Verbs are central to sentence processing, as they encode argument structure (AS) information, i.e., information about the syntax and interpretation of the phrases accompanying them. The behavioral and neural correlates...
12.
Thompson C, Mack J
Aphasiology
. 2015 Feb;
28(8-9):1018-1037.
PMID: 25642014
Background: Grammatical impairments are commonly observed in the agrammatic subtype of primary progressive aphasia (PPA-G), whereas grammatical processing is relatively preserved in logopenic (PPA-L) and semantic (PPA-S) subtypes. Aims: We...
13.
Mack J, Meltzer-Asscher A, Barbieri E, Thompson C
Brain Sci
. 2014 Jun;
3(3):1198-214.
PMID: 24961525
Previous research has shown that comprehension of complex sentences involving wh-movement (e.g., object-relative clauses) elicits activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and left posterior temporal cortex. However, relatively...
14.
Mack J, Ji W, Thompson C
J Neurolinguistics
. 2013 Oct;
26(6):619-636.
PMID: 24092952
Relatively little is known about the time course of access to the lexical representations of verbs in agrammatic aphasia and its effects on the prediction and integration of the verb's...
15.
Mack J, Cho-Reyes S, Kloet J, Weintraub S, Mesulam M, Thompson C
Cogn Neuropsychol
. 2013 Sep;
30(3):172-93.
PMID: 24070176
Phonological processing deficits are characteristic of both the agrammatic and logopenic subtypes of primary progressive aphasia (PPA-G and PPA-L). However, it is an open question which substages of phonological processing...
16.
Mack J, Clifton Jr C, Frazier L, Taylor P
J Mem Lang
. 2012 Jul;
67(1):211-223.
PMID: 22754087
No abstract available.
17.
Meyer A, Mack J, Thompson C
J Neurolinguistics
. 2011 Nov;
25(1):31-43.
PMID: 22043134
People with agrammatic aphasia often experience greater difficulty comprehending passive compared to active sentences. The Trace Deletion Hypothesis (TDH; Grodzinsky, 2000) proposes that aphasic individuals cannot generate accurate syntactic representations...