In post-stroke aphasia, language tasks recruit a combination of residual regions within the canonical language network, as well as regions outside of it in the left and right hemispheres. However, there is a lack of consensus as to how the neural resources engaged by language production and comprehension following a left hemisphere stroke differ from one another and from controls. The present meta-analysis used activation likelihood estimates to aggregate across 44 published fMRI and PET studies to characterize the functional reorganization patterns for expressive and receptive language processes in persons with chronic post-stroke aphasia (PWA). Our results in part replicate previous meta-analyses: we find that PWA activate residual region...
The right postero-lateral cerebellum participates with the left frontal lobe in the selection and pr...
The role of the right hemisphere (RH) in recovery from aphasia is incompletely understood. The prese...
The study of language network plasticity following left hemisphere stroke is foundational to the und...
Deficits in phonology are among the most common and persistent impairments in aphasia after left hem...
The loss and recovery of language functions are still incompletely understood. This longitudinal fun...
The loss and recovery of language functions are still incompletely understood. This longitudinal fun...
The role of left and right hemisphere brain regions in language recovery after stroke-induced aphasi...
The role of left and right hemisphere brain regions in language recovery after stroke-induced aphasi...
The neural correlates of aphasic errors in spontaneous language are largely unknown. The impact of t...
Aphasia recovery post-stroke is classically and most commonly hypothesised to rely on regions that w...
The neural correlates of aphasic errors in spontaneous language are largely unknown. The impact of t...
Background and Purpose- Brain areas associated with functional improvement differ between acute and ...
The relative contribution of dominant and non-dominant language networks to recovery from aphasia is...
Knowledge of spatiotemporal patterns of language network changes may help in predicting outcome in a...
Knowledge of spatiotemporal patterns of language network changes may help in predicting outcome in a...
The right postero-lateral cerebellum participates with the left frontal lobe in the selection and pr...
The role of the right hemisphere (RH) in recovery from aphasia is incompletely understood. The prese...
The study of language network plasticity following left hemisphere stroke is foundational to the und...
Deficits in phonology are among the most common and persistent impairments in aphasia after left hem...
The loss and recovery of language functions are still incompletely understood. This longitudinal fun...
The loss and recovery of language functions are still incompletely understood. This longitudinal fun...
The role of left and right hemisphere brain regions in language recovery after stroke-induced aphasi...
The role of left and right hemisphere brain regions in language recovery after stroke-induced aphasi...
The neural correlates of aphasic errors in spontaneous language are largely unknown. The impact of t...
Aphasia recovery post-stroke is classically and most commonly hypothesised to rely on regions that w...
The neural correlates of aphasic errors in spontaneous language are largely unknown. The impact of t...
Background and Purpose- Brain areas associated with functional improvement differ between acute and ...
The relative contribution of dominant and non-dominant language networks to recovery from aphasia is...
Knowledge of spatiotemporal patterns of language network changes may help in predicting outcome in a...
Knowledge of spatiotemporal patterns of language network changes may help in predicting outcome in a...
The right postero-lateral cerebellum participates with the left frontal lobe in the selection and pr...
The role of the right hemisphere (RH) in recovery from aphasia is incompletely understood. The prese...
The study of language network plasticity following left hemisphere stroke is foundational to the und...