Items where Author is "Morton, Nicholas"
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Number of items: 7.
Article
GREENE, Leanne, BARKER, Lynne, REIDY, John, MORTON, Nicholas and ATHERTON, Alistair
(2018).
Exploring fixation patterns and social cognition after traumatic brain injury.
Journal of Neurology and Neuroscience, 9, p. 71.
[Article]
BARKER, Lynne and MORTON, Nicholas
(2018).
Editorial: Executive function(s): Conductor, orchestra or symphony? Towards a trans-disciplinary unification of theory and practice across development, in normal and atypical groups.
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 12, p. 85.
[Article]
MCGUIRE, Brian E., MORRISON, Todd G., BARKER, Lynne A., MORTON, Nicholas, MCBRINN, Judith, CALDWELL, Sheena, WILSON, Colin F., MCCANN, John, CARTON, Simone, DELARGY, Mark and WALSH, Jane
(2015).
Impaired self awareness after traumatic brain injury: inter-rater reliability and factor structure of the dysexecutive questionnairre (DEX) in patients, significant others and clinicians.
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 8 (352), 1-7.
[Article]
BARKER, Lynne, MORTON, Nicholas, ROMANOWSKI, Charles A J and GOSDEN, Kevin
(2013).
Complete abolition of reading and writing ability with a third ventricle colloid cyst: implications for surgical intervention and proposed neural substrates of visual recognition and visual imaging ability.
BMJ case reports, 2013.
[Article]
BARKER, Lynne, MORTON, Nicholas, MORRISON, Todd and MCGUIRE, Brian
(2011).
Inter-rater reliability of the Dysexecutive Questionnaire (DEX): comparative data from non-clinician respondents – all raters are not equal.
Brain Injury, 25 (10), 997-1004.
[Article]
BARKER, Lynne, ANDRADE, Jackie, MORTON, Nicholas, ROMANOWSKI, Charles and BOWLES, David
(2010).
Investigating the 'latent' deficit hypothesis : age at time of head injury, executive and implicit functions and behavioral insight.
Neuropsychologia, 48 (9), 2550-2563.
[Article]
MORTON, Nicholas and BARKER, Lynne
(2010).
The contribution of injury severity, executive and implicit
functions to awareness of defi cits after traumatic brain
injury (TBI).
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 16 (06), 1089-1098.
[Article]