1. 276.
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    @227 profesyonel çalışıyo bin. diplomanı da ver bari işe alsın amk
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  2. 277.
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    işe girerken kadına gib günü sirke!
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  3. 278.
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    that save your vote :(
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  4. 279.
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    are you bear?
    do you sex?
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  5. 280.
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    bana ingilizce öğretene veriyorum..
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    your mother
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  7. 282.
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    @232 bambaşka çıktı
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  8. 283.
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    what can i do my baby sometimess thats the sex its the sex
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  9. 284.
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    mada faka
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  10. 285.
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    lol

    yup.. ı can write blue...
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    i am fucker takır takır
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    throughout the field of neuropsychology, evidence for complex implicit
    competence has been documented in patients with neurological damage and
    limited linguistic, attentional, or mnemonic performance. such results suggest that systems are activated and carrying out their functions even though
    this information is no longer available for conscious planning and problem
    solving. one example of this sort of competence in the face of impaired
    behavior is lexical and semantic priming in neurological populations. results
    of this sort have been widely reported but their neurological implications
    and relation to psycholinguistic models of processing have not been made
    clear.
    the goal of this symposium is to examine the locus of both preserved and
    disturbed facilitation from the level of form represented by repetition priming
    to the level of conceptual knowledge represented by pictures. at the periphery, dr. swick’s studies of patients with left and right temporal parietal lesions demonstrate intact repetition priming for words, but an impairment in
    repetition priming of nonwords in left lesioned patients. prior work has
    shown that both word and nonword repetition priming were intact in patients
    with frontal lobe damage. she hypothesizes that this may be related to a
    defective phonological store in the left temporal parietal patients which is
    crucial to establishing a stable representation of the nonword stimuli. drs.
    baynes and dronkers have examined the hemispheric organization and integration of lexical-semantic and conceptual knowledge by studying facilitation of words and pictures in normal controls, focal lesion patients and splitbrain subjects. facilitation effects indicate that both hemispheres support a
    135
    0093-934x/98 $25.00
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    all rights of reproduction in any form reserved.136 academy of aphasia meeting
    semantic network with preferential processing of lexical information in the
    left hemisphere and conceptual information in the right hemisphere. these
    results are consistent with the idea that lexemes and concepts are represented
    by dual codes, a verbal based code and an image based code (paivio, 1991).
    this idea finds further support in the erp results of the third paper in this
    symposium presented by dr. swaab. efficient integration of lexical-semantic
    and conceptual information requires an intact corpus callosum. additionally,
    in this study, the role of the right hemisphere in the processing of associative
    and purely semantic relations between words was examined in patients that
    have a focal lesion in the right hemisphere. results indicate that sensitivity
    to semantic relations is disrupted in right hemisphere lesioned patients, which
    indicates that the right hemisphere may be involved in processing more distant semantic relations between words, or coarse semantic coding (beeman
    et al., 1994). finally, dr. ober has exhaustively studied the semantic and
    associative priming of patients with alzheimer’s dementia (ad) under a variety of conditions to better characterize semantic memory in ad. she has
    concluded that the implicit knowledge of semantic relations is indeed intact
    in mild to moderate alzheimer’s disease and that task variables have a powerful influence on the performance of patients and controls. the robustness
    of semantic knowledge in this population argues for a distributed representation of conceptual knowledge that is maintained well into the dementing
    process.
    how these results relate to models of psycholinguistic processing, including associative networks such as the hal model (burgess & lund, 1997),
    and more traditional spreading activation models (e.g., anderson, 1983 ) will
    be discussed by dr. debra long, a cognitive psychologist whose own work
    in text comprehension and memory has looked at the contribution of individual differences to successful reading performance. consideration will be
    given to the degree to which modular processes and distributed systems can
    be compatibly represented. she will integrate the common threads from these
    papers and suggest directions for (bitti)
    Tümünü Göster
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  13. 288.
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    dress download
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  14. 289.
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    hey havaryo
    ben muhafazid türkiy istanbul
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    maybe you and me be a beatiful lovers ha?
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    ingilizce ogretmeniyim anasini bile giberim ingilizcenin..
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    yeees

    yes
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    go to power?
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    it's only in the mysterious equation of love that any logical reasons can be found. al bunu düşün amk,bu aralar daha anlamlı gelmeye başladı bana.
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    are you player? are you player?
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