Commonly displayed functional asymmetries such as hand dominance and hemispheric speech lateralisation are well researched in adults. However there is debate about when such functions become lateralised in the typically developing brain. This study examined whether patterns of speech laterality and hand dominance were related and whether they varied with age in typically developing children. 148 children aged 3-10 years performed an electronic pegboard task to determine hand dominance; a subset of 38 of these children also underwent functional Transcranial Doppler (fTCD) imaging to derive a lateralisation index (LI) for hemispheric activation during speech production using an animation description paradigm. There was no main effect of age i...
Research using clinical populations to explore the relationship between hemispheric speech lateralis...
Contains fulltext : 102450.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In the majority...
Is hemisphere lateralization for speech processing linked to handedness? To answer this question, we...
AbstractCommonly displayed functional asymmetries such as hand dominance and hemispheric speech late...
Commonly displayed functional asymmetries such as hand dominance and hemispheric speech lateralisati...
A relationship between motor control and speech lateralization has long been postulated by researche...
Introduction: Although the relationship between language lateralization and handedness has long been...
The association between praxis and language is longstanding in neuropsychology, with evidence revea...
Objective: Skilled motor praxis and speech production display marked asymmetries at the individual a...
Background It has been suggested that failure to establish cerebral lateralisation may be related to...
Background It has been suggested that failure to establish cerebral lateralisation may be related to...
It has been known for many years that hand preference is associated with cerebral lateralisation for...
It has been known for many years that hand preference is associated with cerebral lateralisation for...
It has been known for many years that hand preference is associated with cerebral lateralisation for...
Aim: Research using clinical populations to explore the relationship between hemispheric speech late...
Research using clinical populations to explore the relationship between hemispheric speech lateralis...
Contains fulltext : 102450.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In the majority...
Is hemisphere lateralization for speech processing linked to handedness? To answer this question, we...
AbstractCommonly displayed functional asymmetries such as hand dominance and hemispheric speech late...
Commonly displayed functional asymmetries such as hand dominance and hemispheric speech lateralisati...
A relationship between motor control and speech lateralization has long been postulated by researche...
Introduction: Although the relationship between language lateralization and handedness has long been...
The association between praxis and language is longstanding in neuropsychology, with evidence revea...
Objective: Skilled motor praxis and speech production display marked asymmetries at the individual a...
Background It has been suggested that failure to establish cerebral lateralisation may be related to...
Background It has been suggested that failure to establish cerebral lateralisation may be related to...
It has been known for many years that hand preference is associated with cerebral lateralisation for...
It has been known for many years that hand preference is associated with cerebral lateralisation for...
It has been known for many years that hand preference is associated with cerebral lateralisation for...
Aim: Research using clinical populations to explore the relationship between hemispheric speech late...
Research using clinical populations to explore the relationship between hemispheric speech lateralis...
Contains fulltext : 102450.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In the majority...
Is hemisphere lateralization for speech processing linked to handedness? To answer this question, we...