نتایج جستجو برای: left hemisphere damage

تعداد نتایج: 528816  

Journal: :Neuropsychologia 2006
John W Philbeck Marlene Behrmann Tim Biega Lucien Levy

Vestibular information plays a key role in many perceptual and cognitive functions, but surprisingly little is known about how vestibular signals are processed at the cortical level in humans. To address this issue, we tested the ability of two patients, with damage to key components of the vestibular network in either the left or right hemisphere, to perceive passive whole-body rotations (25-1...

Journal: :Cognitive neuropsychology 2006
Matthew Finkbeiner Jorge Almeida Alfonso Caramazza

Recent neuroimaging studies have revealed that letters activate both the left and the right fusiform areas, but that only the left fusiform responds to letters more than to control stimuli (Cohen et al., 2003). Though these findings suggest that the left fusiform is specialized in its function of identifying letters, it does not rule out the possibility that the right fusiform contributes criti...

1997
Elizabeth Bates Donna Thal Doris Trauner Julie Eisele

The effects of focal brain injury are investigated in the first stages of language development, during the passage from first words to grammar. Parent report and/or free speech data are reported for 53 infants and preschool children between 10-44 months of age. All children had suffered a single, unilateral brain injury to the left or right hemisphere, incurred before six months of age (usually...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2010
Julius Fridriksson Olafur Kjartansson Paul S Morgan Haukur Hjaltason Sigridur Magnusdottir Leonardo Bonilha Christopher Rorden

Patients with left hemisphere damage and concomitant aphasia usually have difficulty repeating others' speech. Although impaired speech repetition, the primary symptom of conduction aphasia, has been associated with involvement of the left arcuate fasciculus, its specific lesion correlate remains elusive. This research examined speech repetition among 45 stroke patients who underwent aphasia te...

beiki, F, Koochaki, GH, Taghavi, A,

Background and Objective: In the process of learning, interaction and organization of both the right and left hemispheres of the brain are involved. The different functions of each hemisphere and the different capacity and learning strategies show that people do not learn in the same way. Paying attention to the capabilities of both hemispheres of the brain in the learning process can lead to a...

Journal: :Brain : a journal of neurology 2004
Kathleen Y Haaland Jillian L Prestopnik Robert T Knight Roland R Lee

Kinematic analyses of reaching have suggested that the left hemisphere is dominant for controlling the open loop component of the movement, which is more dependent on motor programmes; and the right hemisphere is dominant for controlling the closed loop component, which is more dependent on sensory feedback. This open and closed loop hypothesis of hemispheric asymmetry would also predict that a...

Journal: :Cerebral cortex 2013
John D Griffiths William D Marslen-Wilson Emmanuel A Stamatakis Lorraine K Tyler

The core of human language, which differentiates it from the communicative abilities of other species, is the set of combinatorial operations called syntax. For over a century researchers have attempted to understand how this essential function is organized in the brain. Here, we combine behavioral and neuroimaging methods, with left hemisphere-damaged patients and healthy controls, to identify...

Journal: :Journal of rehabilitation research and development 2006
Robert L Sainburg Susan V Duff

Recent findings on motor lateralization have revealed consistent differences in the control strategies of the dominant and nondominant hemisphere/limb systems that could have implications for hemiplegic stroke patients. Studies in stroke patients have demonstrated deficiencies in the ipsilesional arm that reflect these distinctions; patients with right-hemisphere damage tend to show deficits in...

Journal: :Brain research. Cognitive brain research 1996
G Goldenberg J Hermsdörfer J Spatt

Ideomotor apraxia is a symptom of left hemisphere damage. Patients with ideomotor apraxia commit errors when imitating movements with their left, non-paralyzed hand. This has been taken as evidence for a motor dominance of the left hemisphere. It has been hypothesized that the left hemisphere is dominant for internal preprogramming of skilled movements of either hand. We investigated the kinema...

Journal: :Brain : a journal of neurology 2011
Pratik K Mutha Robert L Sainburg Kathleen Y Haaland

Our proficiency at any skill is critically dependent on the ability to monitor our performance, correct errors and adapt subsequent movements so that errors are avoided in the future. In this study, we aimed to dissociate the neural substrates critical for correcting unexpected trajectory errors and learning to adapt future movements based on those errors. Twenty stroke patients with focal dama...

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