Mixed transcortical aphasia is a very rare syndrome characterized by intact repetition, despite severe impairment in all other language modalities. In some cases, however, preservation of repetition is accompanied by intact reading. We report the case of a left-handed man who, after a subcortical stroke in the left hemisphere, showed the typical features of mixed transcortical aphasia with spared repetition and reading. After 10 days, a second stroke, involving the anterior insula and adjacent white matter bundles, markedly deteriorated repetition while his reading abilities recovered. By comparing features of repetition and reading before and after the second stroke, we provide evidence for the existence of a modular organization of langua...
The present study explores the functional neuroanatomy of the phonological production system in an I...
For more than a century, speech repetition has been used as an assay for gauging the integrity of th...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Knowledge of the anatomic basis of aphasia after stroke has both theoretic a...
Journal Article;Knowledge on the patterns of repetition amongst individuals who develop language def...
The classical view of aphasia suggests that conduction aphasia results from disconnection between th...
We present a case of transcortical mixed aphasia caused by a cerebral embolism. A 77-year-old right-...
A variety of language disturbances including aphasia have been described after subcortical stroke bu...
In the 19th century, ground-breaking observations on aphasia by Broca and Wernicke suggested that la...
Crossed aphasia in dextrals (CAD) following pure subcortical lesions is rare. This study describes a...
PubMedID: 9686282A 55 year-old, right-handed, hypertensive woman with global aphasia, due to a spont...
A case of crossed aphasia in a right-handed woman resulting from a right-hemisphere stroke is report...
We report on the neuropsychological and neurolinguistic features of a bilingual patient, E.M., who p...
Impairments in word repetition and comprehension are common in individuals with aphasia. Repetition ...
AbstractLanguage reorganisation following stroke has been studied widely. However, while studies of ...
Background and Purpose- Brain areas associated with functional improvement differ between acute and ...
The present study explores the functional neuroanatomy of the phonological production system in an I...
For more than a century, speech repetition has been used as an assay for gauging the integrity of th...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Knowledge of the anatomic basis of aphasia after stroke has both theoretic a...
Journal Article;Knowledge on the patterns of repetition amongst individuals who develop language def...
The classical view of aphasia suggests that conduction aphasia results from disconnection between th...
We present a case of transcortical mixed aphasia caused by a cerebral embolism. A 77-year-old right-...
A variety of language disturbances including aphasia have been described after subcortical stroke bu...
In the 19th century, ground-breaking observations on aphasia by Broca and Wernicke suggested that la...
Crossed aphasia in dextrals (CAD) following pure subcortical lesions is rare. This study describes a...
PubMedID: 9686282A 55 year-old, right-handed, hypertensive woman with global aphasia, due to a spont...
A case of crossed aphasia in a right-handed woman resulting from a right-hemisphere stroke is report...
We report on the neuropsychological and neurolinguistic features of a bilingual patient, E.M., who p...
Impairments in word repetition and comprehension are common in individuals with aphasia. Repetition ...
AbstractLanguage reorganisation following stroke has been studied widely. However, while studies of ...
Background and Purpose- Brain areas associated with functional improvement differ between acute and ...
The present study explores the functional neuroanatomy of the phonological production system in an I...
For more than a century, speech repetition has been used as an assay for gauging the integrity of th...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Knowledge of the anatomic basis of aphasia after stroke has both theoretic a...