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1 judgements), and overt speech tasks (reading aloud).
2 nd Read; physicians advising parents to read aloud.
3 s were asked to name the same set of objects aloud.
4 served, even for words he was unable to read aloud.
5 fects the brain regions activated by reading aloud.
6 a key role for semantic knowledge in reading aloud.
7 cal processing while participants read words aloud.
9 decision-making by asking surgeons to think aloud about selected memorable cases and a standardized
11 performed two cognitive tasks, reading nouns aloud and generating appropriate verbs for the same noun
12 dict the performance of the model on reading aloud and nonword reading, which assimilated behavioural
13 n regions that were activated during reading aloud and picture naming in a patient with left putamen
14 results clarify the neurobiology of reading aloud and support the existence of a post-semantic impai
15 that semantic processing influences reading aloud and that semantic deficits in the context of seman
17 , healthy eyes read Bailey-Lovie word charts aloud, and subsequently, critical print size and optimal
18 ility to recall a word list and a story read aloud, as well as recall items while counting backwards.
19 rson who speaks English and Spanish can read aloud "con once, sin once," going effortlessly from one
21 anterior IFG.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Reading aloud depends on multiple complex cerebral computations:
25 en asking them to recall these clips, either aloud (Experiment 1) or silently while in an MRI scanner
28 These data support the view that reading aloud is underpinned by the joint operation of two neura
29 recordings in a large cohort while they read aloud known and novel words, to track, across space and
30 ce supporting a dual-route model for reading aloud mediated by the interplay between lexico-semantic
32 s viewed both words and read the second word aloud, or a "generate" condition, where the second word
34 gnetic resonance imaging study using a think-aloud paradigm, where participants verbalize their unint
35 ght on these mechanisms, we adapted a "think aloud" paradigm to quantify the content and dynamics of
36 in their diagnostic process in detail (think-aloud protocol), mark findings relevant to their reasoni
41 nd, these scenarios were tested during think-aloud simulated encounters with expert PCPs to iterative
43 interview techniques were applied: Thinking Aloud (TA) during the assessment and Verbal Probing (VP)
45 oud their thoughts in real-time (i.e., Think Aloud task), under two conditions varying in the levels
47 affected the ability to recall a story read aloud, the glucose drink did not reverse this decline.
48 ind's mind form of thinking while describing aloud their memories of specific, past events (Study 1).
50 cle describes the evidence about why reading aloud to children is important to help them develop the
53 icipants listened to questions and responded aloud with answers while we used high-density electrocor
54 d behavioral and neural responses to reading aloud words and pronounceable nonsense words (pseudoword