Tatiana T. Schnur
Affiliations: | Neurosurgery | Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX |
Area:
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"Tatiana Schnur"Cross-listing: Neurotree - CSD Tree
Parents
Sign in to add mentorAlfonso Caramazza | grad student | 2003 | Harvard | |
(Planning at the phonological level during sentence production.) | ||||
Myrna F. Schwartz | post-doc | Rice University | ||
Sharon L. Thompson-Schill | post-doc | Rice University (Neurotree) |
Children
Sign in to add traineeMegan A Kirchgessner | research assistant | 2010-2012 | Rice University (Neurotree) |
Denise Y. Harvey | grad student | 2014 | Rice University (Neurotree) |
Jingyi Geng | grad student | 2015 | Rice University |
Julie Walker Hughes | grad student | 2016 | Rice University (Neurotree) |
Tao Wei | grad student | 2016 | Rice University |
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Publications
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Martin RC, Ding J, Alwani AI, et al. (2024) Recovery of Verbal Working Memory Depends on Left Hemisphere White Matter Tracts. Biorxiv : the Preprint Server For Biology |
Horne A, Ding J, Schnur TT, et al. (2024) Correction: Horne et al. White Matter Correlates of Domain-Specific Working Memory. 2023, , 19. Brain Sciences. 14 |
Schnur TT, Wang S. (2023) Differences in Connected Speech Outcomes Across Elicitation Methods. Aphasiology. 38: 816-837 |
Zahn R, Schnur TT, Martin RC. (2023) Contributions of semantic and phonological working memory to narrative language independent of single word production: Evidence from acute stroke. Cognitive Neuropsychology. 1-29 |
Horne A, Ding J, Schnur TT, et al. (2022) White Matter Correlates of Domain-Specific Working Memory. Brain Sciences. 13 |
Schnur TT, Lei CM. (2022) Assessing naming errors using an automated machine learning approach. Neuropsychology |
Martin RC, Ding J, Hamilton AC, et al. (2021) Working Memory Capacities Neurally Dissociate: Evidence from Acute Stroke. Cerebral Cortex Communications. 2: tgab005 |
Ding J, Martin RC, Hamilton AC, et al. (2020) Dissociation between frontal and temporal-parietal contributions to connected speech in acute stroke. Brain : a Journal of Neurology |
Ding J, Martin R, Hamilton C, et al. (2019) Multivariate Lesion-Symptom Mapping of Spontaneous Speech: Evidence from Acute Stroke Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 13 |
Lei C, Schnur T. (2019) Evaluating naming errors using a computational lexical semantic similarity measure Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 13 |