Bock, K., & Levelt, W. (1994). Language production: Grammatical encoding. In M.A. Gernsbacher (Ed.), Handbook of psycholinguistics (pp. 945-984). New York: Academic Press
Brédart, S. (1993). Retrieval failures in face naming. Memory, I, 351-366.
Brennen, T. (1993). The difficulty with recalling people's names: The plausible phonology hypothesis. Memory, 1, 409-431.
Bruce, V., & Young, A. (1986). Understanding face recognition. British Journal of Psychology, 77, 305-327.
Burke, D.M., MacKay, D.G., Worthley, J.S., & Wade, E. (1991). On the tip of the tongue: What causes word finding failures in young and older adults? Journal of Memory and Language, 30, 542-579.
Burton, A.M., Bruce, V., & Johnston, R. (1990). Understanding face recognition with an interactive activation model. British Journal of Psychology, 81, 361-380.
Carney, R., & Temple, C.M. (1993). Prosopanomia? A possible category-specific anomia for faces. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 10, 185-195.
Cipolotti, L., McNeil, J.E., & Warrington, E.K. (1993). Spared written naming of proper nouns: A case report. Memory, 1, 289-311.
Cohen, G. (1990). Why is it difficult to put names to faces? British Journal of Psychology, 81, 287-297.
Cohen, G., & Burke, D.M. (1993). Memory for proper names: A review. Memory, 1, 249-263.
De Haan, E H F., Young, A.W., & Newcombe, F. (1991). A dissociation between the sense of familiarity and access to semantic information concerning familiar people. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 3, 51-67.
Ellis, A.W., Young, A.W., & Critchley, E.M.R. (1989). Loss of memory for people following temporal lobe damage. Brain, 112, 1469-1483.
Fery, P., Vincent, E., & Brédart, S. (1995). Personal name anomia: A single-case study. Cortex, 31, 191-198.
Lucchelli, F., & De Renzi, E. (1992). Proper name anomia. Cortex, 28, 221-230.
McKenna, P., & Warrington, E.K. (1978). Category specific naming preservation: A single case study. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 41, 571-574.
McKenna, P., & Warrington, E.K. (1980). Testing for nominal dysphasia. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 43, 781-788.
McNeil, J E., Cipolotti, L., & Warrington, E.K. (1994). The accessibility of proper names. Neuropsychologia, 32, 193-205.
Semenza, C., & Sgaramella, T.M. (1993). Production of proper names: A clinical study of the effects of phonemic cueing. Memory, 1, 265-280.
Semenza, C., & Zettin, M. (1988). Generating proper names: A case of selective inability. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 5, 711-721.
Semenza, C., & Zettin, M. (1989). Evidence from aphasia for the role of proper names as pure referring expressions. Nature, 342, 678-679.
Seymour, P.H.K. (1979). Human visual cognition. London: Collier Macmillan.
Valentine, T., Brédart, S., Lawson, R., & Ward, G. (1991). What's in a name: Access to information from people's names. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 3, 147-176.
Valentine, T., Brennen, T., & Brédart, S. (1996). The cognitive psychology of proper names. London: Routledge.
Van Lancker, D., & Klein, K. (1990). Preserved recognition of familiar personal names in global aphasia. Brain and Language, 39, 511-529.
Warrington, E.K., & McCarthy, R.A. (1987). Categories of knowledge: Further fractionations and an attempted integration. Brain, 110, 1273-1296.