Background: Most people have strong left-brain lateralisation for language, with a minority showing right- or bilateral language representation. On some receptive language tasks, however, lateralisation appears to be reduced or absent. This contrasting pattern raises the question of whether and how language laterality may fractionate within individuals. Building on our prior work, we postulated (a) that there can be dissociations in lateralisation of different components of language, and (b) these would be more common in left-handers. A subsidiary hypothesis was that laterality indices will cluster according to two underlying factors corresponding to whether they involve generation of words or sentences, versus receptive language. Methods: ...
AbstractHistorically, most theoretical accounts of hemispheric specialisation have proposed a single...
A previous study we reported in this journal suggested that left and right-handers may differ in the...
A previous study we reported in this journal suggested that left and right-handers may differ in the...
Background Most people have strong left-brain lateralisation for language, with a minority showing ...
Background Most people have strong left-brain lateralisation for language, with a minority showing r...
Disruption to language lateralisation has been proposed as a cause of developmental language impairm...
Language lateralisation refers to the phenomenon in which one hemisphere (typically the left) shows ...
Cerebral lateralisation for language refers to the well-established finding of a bias in language pr...
Evidence suggests that an individuals’ handedness is intrinsically linked to their brain asymmetry f...
It is well known that language processing depends on specialized areas in the left side of the brain...
Language lateralisation refers to the phenomenon in which one hemisphere (typically the left) shows ...
A previous study we reported in this journal suggested that left and right handers may differ in the...
Background It has been suggested that failure to establish cerebral lateralisation may be related to...
Human language is dominantly processed in the left cerebral hemisphere in most of the population. Wh...
Left-handers provide unique information about the relationship between cognitive functions because o...
AbstractHistorically, most theoretical accounts of hemispheric specialisation have proposed a single...
A previous study we reported in this journal suggested that left and right-handers may differ in the...
A previous study we reported in this journal suggested that left and right-handers may differ in the...
Background Most people have strong left-brain lateralisation for language, with a minority showing ...
Background Most people have strong left-brain lateralisation for language, with a minority showing r...
Disruption to language lateralisation has been proposed as a cause of developmental language impairm...
Language lateralisation refers to the phenomenon in which one hemisphere (typically the left) shows ...
Cerebral lateralisation for language refers to the well-established finding of a bias in language pr...
Evidence suggests that an individuals’ handedness is intrinsically linked to their brain asymmetry f...
It is well known that language processing depends on specialized areas in the left side of the brain...
Language lateralisation refers to the phenomenon in which one hemisphere (typically the left) shows ...
A previous study we reported in this journal suggested that left and right handers may differ in the...
Background It has been suggested that failure to establish cerebral lateralisation may be related to...
Human language is dominantly processed in the left cerebral hemisphere in most of the population. Wh...
Left-handers provide unique information about the relationship between cognitive functions because o...
AbstractHistorically, most theoretical accounts of hemispheric specialisation have proposed a single...
A previous study we reported in this journal suggested that left and right-handers may differ in the...
A previous study we reported in this journal suggested that left and right-handers may differ in the...