Published in Neuropsychology on May 01, 2005
More use almost always a means a smaller frequency effect: Aging, bilingualism, and the weaker links hypothesis. J Mem Lang (2008) 2.11
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Electrophysiological explorations of the bilingual advantage: evidence from a Stroop task. PLoS One (2014) 0.78
A disadvantage in bilingual sentence production modulated by syntactic frequency and similarity across languages. Cognition (2013) 0.76
Breaking Down the Bilingual Cost in Speech Production. Cogn Sci (2015) 0.75
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The bilingual effect on Boston Naming Test performance. J Int Neuropsychol Soc (2007) 2.74
Semantic and letter fluency in Spanish-English bilinguals. Neuropsychology (2002) 2.24
Bilingualism affects picture naming but not picture classification. Mem Cognit (2005) 2.15
More use almost always a means a smaller frequency effect: Aging, bilingualism, and the weaker links hypothesis. J Mem Lang (2008) 2.11
Degree of bilingualism predicts age of diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease in low-education but not in highly educated Hispanics. Neuropsychologia (2011) 1.13
Accessibility of the nondominant language in picture naming: a counterintuitive effect of dementia on bilingual language production. Neuropsychologia (2009) 1.03