Medicina: Neuropsicologia cognitiva
English |
input en. |
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Attestation |
3
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Part of speech |
Noun
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Grammatical label |
countable
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Definition |
Any signal which can first stimulate a reaction in a sensorial organ and then lead the patient to a response/an output. Any signal (e.g. a phoneme, a pair or a string of phonemes, a grapheme, a pair or a string of graphemes, a word, a picture or an object) which can first stimulate a reaction in a sensorial organ and then lead the patient to a response.
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Definition source |
Vista-Mead 2001 Vista-Mead 2001
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Context |
The feedback procedures are not made explicit. The results of the therapy are reported descriptively rather than numerically, but the considerable improvement in quality and quantity of spontaneous speech is obvious from the speech samples provided. BB grasped the concept of mapping meaning relations both in input and output, despite all the therapy focussing on input, and after the therapy he used more sentence structure in output. From the speech samples provided it appears that the majority of the structured utterances he produced did not include embedding or the use of clauses. He used appropriate verbs correctly inflected for both tense and subject agreement, and there was also a marked improvement in the production of function words, neither of which aspects of production were worked on directly.
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Context source |
Paradis 1993
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Synonym |
Item
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Subject field |
Aphasia
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Sub-field (level 1) |
Aphasiology
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Sub-field (level 2) |
Cognitive neuropsychology
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Sub-field (level 3) |
Lexical processing system
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Specific concept |
Visual input, Tactile input, Auditory input, Orthographic input
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it |
Stimolo
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Reliability code |
3
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