2. M-L Kean (Editor). Agrammatism. Academic Press, New York. In press.
2. M-L Kean. The strict cycle in phonology. Linguistic Inquiry, V, 1974, 179-203.
3. M-L Kean. "Natural processes" and "learned rules" in markedness theory. NELS VII, 1977, 135-146.
4. M-L Kean. The Linguistic interpretation of aphasic syndromes: Agrammatism in Broca's aphasia, an example. Cognition, V, 1977, 9-46.
5. M-L Kean. An annotated bibliography of works on and in Afro-American English. In P. Luelsdorff (Ed.), Linguistic Perspectives on Black English. Verlag, Nurenberg, 177-219.
6. M-L Kean. The linguistic interpretation of aphasic syndromes. In E. Walker (Ed.), Explorations in the Biology of Language. Bradford Books, Montgomery, VT, 1978, 67-138.
7. M-L Kean. Agrammatism: A phonological deficit? Cognition, VII, 1979, 69-84.
8. M-L Kean. On "Intonation in a man's world." Signs, V, 1979, 367-370.
9. M-L Kean and G. E. Smith. Issues in core linguistic processing. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, II, 1979, 369-370.
10. M-L Kean. Grammatical representation and the description of processing. In D. Caplan (Ed.), Biological Studies of Mental Capacities. MIT Press, Cambridge, 1980, 239-268.
11. M-L Kean. A note on Kolk's "Judgement of sentence structure in Broca's aphasia." Neuropsychologia, 18, 1980, 357-360.
12. M. F. Garrett and M-L Kean. Levels of representation in the analysis of speech errors. In M. Aronoff and M-L Kean (Eds.), Juncture. AMNI Libri, San Francisco, 1980, 79-90.
13. M-L Kean. Explanation in neurolinguistics. In N. Hornstein and D. Lightfoot (Eds.), Explanation in Linguistics. Longman's, London, 1981, 174-208.
14. M-L Kean. On a theory of markedness. In R. Bandi, A. Belletti, and L. Rizzi (Eds.), Theory of Markedness in Generative Grammar. Estratto, Pisa, 1981, 559-604.
15. M-L Kean. Three perspectives for the analysis of aphasic syndromes. In M. Arbib, D. Caplan, and J. Marshall (Eds.), Neural Models of Language Processes, Academic Press, New York, 1982, 173-201.
16. M-L Kean and L. Nadel. The emergence of cognitive neuroscience. In J. Mehler, M. Garrett, and E. Walker (Eds.), Perspectives on Mental Representations. Lawrence Earlbaum Associates, Hilldale, NJ, 1982, 317-325.
17. M-L Kean. The linguistic analysis of aphasic syndromes--the doing and undoing of aphasia research. In D. Caplan (Ed.) Biological Perspectives on Language Processes. MIT Press, Cambridge, in press.
18. M-L Kean. On the relation between grammatical markedness and L2 markedness. Interlanguage Studies Bulletin, in press.
19. M-L Kean. Core issues in transfer. In E. Kellerman and M. Sharwood-Smith (Eds.), Cross-Linguistic Influence in Second Language Requisition. Oxford: Pergamon, in press.
20. M-L Kean. The question of linguistic anomaly in developmental dyslexia, Annals of Dyslexia, 34, 1984, 137-151.
21. M-L Kean. Second language acquisition and grammatical theory: A matter of projection and marking. Linguistics.
22. M-L Kean. Norman Geschwind's contribution to the study of aphasia. In P. Eling (Ed.) From Gall to Geschwind.
2. M-L Kean. Review of Whitaker and Whitaker (Eds.), Studies in Neurolinguistics, IV. Contemporary Psychology, 25, 1980, 373-374.
3. M-L Kean. Review of N. Chomsky, The Generative Enterprise. Language, 60, 1984, 600-604.
Department of Cognitive Sciences Faculty
Department of Cognitive Sciences
Department of Linguistics
UC Irvine School of Social Sciences