To examine brain lateralization of prosody during speech, the sentence production of six right-hemisphere-lesion patients and five left-hemisphere-lesion patients was compared to that of seven normal controls using a question–answer paradigm. The task required the prosodic realization of two different syntactic structures under conditions of wide and narrow focus. Acoustical analyses were carried out on F0 and time structure. These analyses revealed a preserved ability in patients to express differences in syntactic structure via prosody. However, there were deficits in distinguishing narrow focus from wide focus. Whereas both right- and left-hemisphere lesions caused impairments in the realization of F0, time structure was mainly impaired ...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recently, research on the lateralization of linguistic and nonlinguistic (emotional) prosody has exp...
To examine brain lateralization of prosody during speech, the sentence production of six right-hemis...
This paper reviews the major findings and hypotheses to emerge in the literature concerned with spee...
Clinical observations of distortions of production and percep-tion of prosody implicate that distinc...
Hemispheric specialization for the production of linguistic prosody is controversial. A review of th...
Hemispheric specialization for linguistic prosody is a controversial issue. While it is commonly ass...
Hemispheric specialization for linguistic prosody is a controversial issue. While it is commonly ass...
While the left hemispheric role in speech production has been extensively studied the role of the ri...
Recently, research on the lateralization of linguistic and nonlinguistic (emotional) prosody has exp...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
This study examined the production of linguistic prosody in left hemisphere damaged (LHD) and contro...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recently, research on the lateralization of linguistic and nonlinguistic (emotional) prosody has exp...
To examine brain lateralization of prosody during speech, the sentence production of six right-hemis...
This paper reviews the major findings and hypotheses to emerge in the literature concerned with spee...
Clinical observations of distortions of production and percep-tion of prosody implicate that distinc...
Hemispheric specialization for the production of linguistic prosody is controversial. A review of th...
Hemispheric specialization for linguistic prosody is a controversial issue. While it is commonly ass...
Hemispheric specialization for linguistic prosody is a controversial issue. While it is commonly ass...
While the left hemispheric role in speech production has been extensively studied the role of the ri...
Recently, research on the lateralization of linguistic and nonlinguistic (emotional) prosody has exp...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
This study examined the production of linguistic prosody in left hemisphere damaged (LHD) and contro...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recent evidence suggests a relative right-hemispheric specialization for emotional prosody perceptio...
Recently, research on the lateralization of linguistic and nonlinguistic (emotional) prosody has exp...