We report a case of a right-handed patient who, after a massive left-hemisphere infarction, had neuropsychological disturbances compatible with a right-hemisphere lesion. This has been previously called 'reversed laterality'. Two new aspects of this pattern are described: the right hemisphere is as capable as the left in processing complex syntactic and higher psycholinguistic stimuli; reversed laterality is not complete, ideomotor praxis is the only function that does not follow an inverted representation. The existence of different forms of cerebral organization in dextrals is discussed
The hemispheres of the human brain are anatomically and functionally asymmetric, and many cognitive ...
Contains fulltext : 89989.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The left-hemisph...
Objective: Semantic dementia, a subtype of frontotemporal lobar degeneration, is characterised by cr...
We report a case of a right-handed patient who, after a massive left-hemisphere infarction, had neur...
Most current and past research on the cerebral organization of cognitive functions has presupposed c...
Background —General conclusions concerning mechanisms of cerebral lateralization may be learned from...
Evidence supporting individual variations in patterns of hemispheric involvement in the recognition ...
A left-middle-cerebraI rrery infarct in a 51-year-old, nonfamilial left-handed man failed to produce...
A right-handed patient with a large left temporo-parietal infarction manifested various non-dominant...
Speech and language-related functions tend to depend on the left hemisphere more than the right in m...
There is a clearly established division of functional processing between left and right hemispheres ...
In aphasia due to stroke, language-related activity shifts not only to undamaged cortex within the d...
Functional hemispheric asymmetry of the brain, despite the simplistic model well-known from popular ...
AbstractHemispheric lateralization is a frequently encountered phenomenon of cortical function. It d...
Magnetic resonance imaging was used to investigate brain structural and functional asymmetries in 15...
The hemispheres of the human brain are anatomically and functionally asymmetric, and many cognitive ...
Contains fulltext : 89989.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The left-hemisph...
Objective: Semantic dementia, a subtype of frontotemporal lobar degeneration, is characterised by cr...
We report a case of a right-handed patient who, after a massive left-hemisphere infarction, had neur...
Most current and past research on the cerebral organization of cognitive functions has presupposed c...
Background —General conclusions concerning mechanisms of cerebral lateralization may be learned from...
Evidence supporting individual variations in patterns of hemispheric involvement in the recognition ...
A left-middle-cerebraI rrery infarct in a 51-year-old, nonfamilial left-handed man failed to produce...
A right-handed patient with a large left temporo-parietal infarction manifested various non-dominant...
Speech and language-related functions tend to depend on the left hemisphere more than the right in m...
There is a clearly established division of functional processing between left and right hemispheres ...
In aphasia due to stroke, language-related activity shifts not only to undamaged cortex within the d...
Functional hemispheric asymmetry of the brain, despite the simplistic model well-known from popular ...
AbstractHemispheric lateralization is a frequently encountered phenomenon of cortical function. It d...
Magnetic resonance imaging was used to investigate brain structural and functional asymmetries in 15...
The hemispheres of the human brain are anatomically and functionally asymmetric, and many cognitive ...
Contains fulltext : 89989.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The left-hemisph...
Objective: Semantic dementia, a subtype of frontotemporal lobar degeneration, is characterised by cr...