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  1. Reassessing working memory: Comment on Just and Carpenter (1992) and Waters and Caplan (1996).Maryellen C. MacDonald & Morten H. Christiansen - 2002 - Psychological Review 109 (1):35-54.
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  • Functional Neuroanatomy of Second Language Sentence Comprehension: An fMRI Study of Late Learners of American Sign Language.Lisa Johnson, Megan C. Fitzhugh, Yuji Yi, Soren Mickelsen, Leslie C. Baxter, Pamela Howard & Corianne Rogalsky - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • (1 other version)Procesamiento de oraciones ecuacionales en español: Efectos de la edad, memoria operativa, complejidad sintáctica Y Una carga de memoria concurrente.Mónica Véliz de Vos, Bernardo Riffo, José Luis Salas-Herrera & Rubén Roa-Ureta - 2018 - Alpha (Osorno) 46:175-197.
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  • Aging and individual differences in binding during sentence understanding: Evidence from temporary and global syntactic attachment ambiguities.Brennan R. Payne, Sarah Grison, Xuefei Gao, Kiel Christianson, Daniel G. Morrow & Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow - 2014 - Cognition 130 (2):157-173.
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  • What levels of explanation in the behavioural sciences?Giuseppe Boccignone & Roberto Cordeschi (eds.) - 2015 - Frontiers Media SA.
    Complex systems are to be seen as typically having multiple levels of organization. For instance, in the behavioural and cognitive sciences, there has been a long lasting trend, promoted by the seminal work of David Marr, putting focus on three distinct levels of analysis: the computational level, accounting for the What and Why issues, the algorithmic and the implementational levels specifying the How problem. However, the tremendous developments in neuroscience knowledge about processes at different scales of organization together with the (...)
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  • Criteria for the Design and Evaluation of Cognitive Architectures.Sashank Varma - 2011 - Cognitive Science 35 (7):1329-1351.
    Cognitive architectures are unified theories of cognition that take the form of computational formalisms. They support computational models that collectively account for large numbers of empirical regularities using small numbers of computational mechanisms. Empirical coverage and parsimony are the most prominent criteria by which architectures are designed and evaluated, but they are not the only ones. This paper considers three additional criteria that have been comparatively undertheorized. (a) Successful architectures possess subjective and intersubjective meaning, making cognition comprehensible to individual cognitive (...)
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