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Protocol for the development of the international population registry for aphasia after stroke (I-PRAISE)
In: Research outputs 2014 to 2021 (2022)
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2
Dosage, intensity, and frequency of language therapy for aphasia: a systematic review–based, individual participant data network meta-analysis
Brady, MC; Ali, M; VandenBerg, K. - : Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022
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3
Protocol for the development of the international population registry for aphasia after stroke (I-PRAISE)
Ali, M.; Ben Basat, A. L.; Berthier, M.. - : Informa UK Limited, 2021
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4
An aphasia research agenda–a consensus statement from the collaboration of aphasia trialists
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5
Utilising a systematic review-based approach to create a database of individual participant data for meta- and network meta-analyses: the RELEASE database of aphasia after stroke
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6
Dosage, Intensity, and Frequency of Language Therapy for Aphasia: A Systematic Review-Based, Individual Participant Data Network Meta-Analysis
Leemann, B.; Nilipour, R.; Rose, M. L.. - : Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, 2021
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7
Predictors of Poststroke Aphasia Recovery
Bowen, A.; Williams, L.; Pavao Martins, I.. - : Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021
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8
Utilising a systematic review-based approach to create a database of individual participant data for meta- and network meta-analyses: the RELEASE database of aphasia after stroke
Williams, LR; Ali, M; VandenBerg, K. - : Informa UK Limited, 2021
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9
An aphasia research agenda – a consensus statement from the collaboration of aphasia trialists
Ali, M.; Soroli, E.; Jesus, L.M.T.. - : Informa UK Limited, 2021
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10
Predictors of poststroke aphasia recovery: a systematic review-informed individual participant data meta-analysis
Ali, M; VandenBerg, K; Williams, LJ. - : Wolters Kluwer Health, 2021
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11
British muslims caught amidst fogs—a discourse analysis of religious advice and authority
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12
Nationwide survey on attitudes and perceived barriers toward provision of pharmaceutical care among final year undergraduate pharmacy students in the United Arab Emirates
In: PLoS One (2021)
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13
Communicating simply, but not too simply: Reporting of participants and speech and language interventions for aphasia after stroke
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14
Resumptive pronouns in Baha Arabic: an experimental study
Abstract: The phenomenon of resumption has been a central topic of debate for both syntacticians and psycholinguists. The debate particularly centres on whether resumption is a syntactic phenomenon or a processing one and whether this characterization differs across languages (and dependencies). Theoretical and experimental investigations have revealed that resumption exhibits a great deal of variation across (and sometimes within) languages (Sells, 1984; Sells, 1987; Asudeh, 2004; McCloskey, 2006; Asudeh, 2012). This is further complicated by diverging interpretations of the data. Specifically, while the theoretical literature presents resumption as a wide-spread cross-linguistic phenomenon affecting longer distance dependencies and island-violating dependencies, this claim is not confirmed in experimental literature (Farby et al., 2010; Keffala, 2011; Tucker et al., 2019; Perpiñán, 2020, among others). This dissertation examines the phenomenon of resumption in Baha Arabic, a language with a productive use of resumptive pronouns across different types of dependency structures. It aims to investigate the theoretical literature’s argument that resumption is preferred to gaps in certain syntactic configurations (i.e. islands and longer dependencies) and to elaborate on the extent to which resumption in this variety of Arabic differs from resumption in languages like English. Four experimental studies, exploiting both offline and online methods, are conducted. The findings suggest that resumption in Baha Arabic is not a uniform phenomenon, despite the argument that it mainly has a syntactic function; (i) true RPs in illi-structures constitute part of the initial derivation in binding dependencies (as morpho-syntactic features of C do not trigger movement) and (ii) intrusive RPs in wh-questions are utilized as last resort devices to fix derivation problems when movement is illicit. The availability of intrusive RPs as a syntactic last resort device is restricted to wh-questions featuring inherently D-linked fillers ‘i.e. which-fillers’. This dissertation, furthermore, examines the extent to which the type of wh-filler phrase (which vs. what) affects the acceptability and processing of island-violating dependencies in Baha Arabic. Although no such claim had previously been made for Arabic varieties, we found that gapped island-violating dependencies with which- fillers are accepted more than gapped island-violating dependencies with what-fillers. This amelioration effect is interpreted as reflecting an extra-grammatical phenomenon. Though not the focus of the dissertation, our findings suggest that islands are neither a purely syntactic nor a purely processing phenomenon and that a combination of both cognitive and syntactic constraints contribute to it.
URL: https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/28814/
https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/28814/1/Asmaa_Alghamdi_Resumption_PhD_2020.pdf
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15
RELEASE: A protocol for a systematic review based, individual participant data, meta- and network meta-analysis, of complex speech-language therapy interventions for stroke-related aphasia
Brady, M. C.; Ali, M.; VandenBerg, K.. - : Taylor & Francis (Routledge), 2019
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16
RELEASE : a protocol for a systematic review based, individual participant data, meta- and network meta-analysis, of complex speech-language therapy interventions for stroke-related aphasia
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17
LHFPL5 mutation: A rare cause of non-syndromic autosomal recessive hearing loss
Al-Amri, AH; Al Saegh, A; Al-Mamari, W. - : Elsevier, 2019
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18
The impact of the modernisation of Iran on Kurdish society : modernity, modernisation and social change (1920-1979)
Cabi, Marouf. - : The University of St Andrews, 2019
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19
'Transediting’ Saudi Arabia by the BBC: a corpus-driven critical discourse analysis study of representations and power negotiation, 2013–2015
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20
RELEASE: a protocol for a systematic review based, individual participant data, meta- and network meta-analysis, of complex speech-language therapy interventions for stroke-related aphasia
In: Aphasiology, 2019 (2019)
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