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Psychology

D-Index
33
Citations
5171
World Ranking
10490
National Ranking
5509

Overview

Beverly Wulfeck was affiliated with San Diego State University in the United States. Their academic contributions were connected to this institution throughout their career.

No recent papers, frequent co-authors, publication venues, book publications, main fields of study, subfields of study, or main topics of work have been documented in the available data. There is no record of awards won by Beverly Wulfeck in the provided information.

Their profile reflects a focus on research activities associated with San Diego State University, though detailed information about specific research areas or outputs is not present in the data. The lack of listed publications or collaborations suggests limited available records or public access to detailed scholarly achievements.

The absence of documented topics, publications, or recognized contributions in the dataset limits a comprehensive overview of Beverly Wulfeck's scientific impact or areas of expertise.

Best Publications

  • ''Frog, where are you?'' Narratives in children with specific language impairment, early focal brain injury, and Williams syndrome

    Judy Reilly;Molly Losh;Ursula Bellugi;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Language deficits, localization, and grammar: Evidence for a distributive model of language breakdown in aphasic patients and neurologically intact individuals.

    Frederic Dick;Elizabeth Bates;Beverly Wulfeck;Jennifer Aydelott Utman;Jennifer Aydelott Utman

  • Morphological productivity in children with normal language and SLI: a study of the English past tense.

    Virginia A. Marchman;Beverly Wulfeck;Susan Ellis Weismer

  • Cross-linguistic research in aphasia: An overview

    Elizabeth Bates;Beverly Wulfeck;Brian MacWhinney

  • Differential effects of unilateral lesions on language production in children and adults.

    Elizabeth Bates;Judy Reilly;Beverly Wulfeck;Beverly Wulfeck;Nina Dronkers

  • Psycholinguistics: a cross-language perspective.

    Elizabeth Bates;and Antonella Devescovi;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Comprehension in aphasia: a cross-linguistic study

    Elizabeth Bates;Angela Friederici;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Effects of generation mode in fMRI adaptations of semantic fluency: Paced production and overt speech

    Surina Basho;Erica D. Palmer;Miguel A. Rubio;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Production of complex syntax in normal ageing and alzheimer's disease

    Elizabeth Bates;Christine Harris;Virginia Marchman;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Neurological and MRI profiles of children with developmental language impairment.

    Doris Trauner;Beverly Wulfeck;Paula Tallal;John Hesselink

  • Grammatical Morphology in Aphasia: Evidence from Three Languages

    Elizabeth Bates;Angela Friederici;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Phenotypic profiles of language-impaired children based on genetic/family history.

    Paula Tallal;Jeanne Townsend;Jeanne Townsend;Jeanne Townsend;Susan Curtiss;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Neurologic profiles of infants and children after perinatal stroke.

    Doris A. Trauner;Christopher Chase;Patricia Walker;Beverly Wulfeck;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Neurologic, cognitive, and linguistic features of infants after early stroke.

    Beverly B. Wulfeck;Beverly B. Wulfeck;Doris A. Trauner;Doris A. Trauner;Paula A. Tallal

  • The development of complex sentence interpretation in typically developing children compared with children with specific language impairments or early unilateral focal lesions

    Frederic Dick;Beverly Wulfeck;Beverly Wulfeck;Magda Krupa-Kwiatkowski;Elizabeth Bates;Elizabeth Bates

  • A crosslinguistic study of grammaticality judgments in Broca's aphasia

    Beverly Wulfeck;Elizabeth Bates;Rita Capasso

  • On the preservation of word order in aphasia: Cross-linguistic evidence

    Elizabeth A. Bates;Angela D. Friederici;Beverly B. Wulfeck;Larry A. Juarez

  • Mechanisms of verbal memory impairment in four neurodevelopmental disorders

    Sharon Nichols;Wendy Jones;Mary J Roman;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Grammaticality Judgments and Sentence Comprehension in Agrammatic Aphasia.

    Beverly B. Wulfeck

  • Comparative aphasiology: A cross-linguistic approach to language breakdown

    Elizabeth Bates;Beverly Wulfeck

  • Is it timing after all

    Sonja A. Kotz;D. Yves von Cramon

Frequent Co-Authors

Elizabeth Bates
Elizabeth Bates University of California, San Diego
Judy Reilly
Judy Reilly San Diego State University
Frederic Dick
Frederic Dick Birkbeck, University of London
Angela D. Friederici
Angela D. Friederici Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
Jeanne Townsend
Jeanne Townsend University of California, San Diego
Nina F. Dronkers
Nina F. Dronkers University of California, Davis
Doris A. Trauner
Doris A. Trauner University of California, San Diego
Virginia A. Marchman
Virginia A. Marchman Stanford University
Paula Tallal
Paula Tallal Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Ralph-Axel Müller
Ralph-Axel Müller San Diego State University

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Best Scientists Citing Beverly Wulfeck