After stroke, the interhemispheric reorganisation of the neural network implicated in language is hypothesized to be a function not only of the site of lesion but also of the residual impairment. With a multiple case approach, we tested this hypothesis in three chronic aphasic patients. Two patients, GE (capsulo-lenticular stroke) and JHN (fronto-temporal stroke) showed formal residual semantic difficulties, while the third patient (EG, large sylvian lesion) did not. Brain electric activity was analysed during a categorisation task of tachistoscopically presented words in the left and the right visual field. The temporal analysis of brain activity showed that both patients with semantic residual difficulties activated the right hemisphere (...
Brain lesions are known to elicit reorganization of function in representational cortex. Using lingu...
AIM: Little is known about how treatment affects the neural substrate of language function in stroke...
The loss and recovery of language functions are still incompletely understood. This longitudinal fun...
The neural correlates of aphasic errors in spontaneous language are largely unknown. The impact of t...
Verbal stimuli often induce right-hemispheric activation in patients with aphasia after left-hemisph...
textFunctional neuroimaging research on language recovery in patients with aphasia due to left hemis...
textNeuroplasticity research yields mixed results for the differential contribution of perilesional ...
The role of the right hemisphere for language processing and successful therapeutic interventions in...
In post-stroke aphasia, language tasks recruit a combination of residual regions within the canonica...
Our understanding of post-stroke language function is largely based on older age groups, who show in...
Deficits in phonology are among the most common and persistent impairments in aphasia after left hem...
Understanding the neural mechanism that supports preserved language processing in aphasia has implic...
Changes in brain connectivity during language therapy were examined among participants with aphasia ...
The role of the two hemispheres in the neurorehabilitation of language is still under dispute. This ...
The left hemisphere (LH) is accepted as the dominant hemisphere for language processing. There is al...
Brain lesions are known to elicit reorganization of function in representational cortex. Using lingu...
AIM: Little is known about how treatment affects the neural substrate of language function in stroke...
The loss and recovery of language functions are still incompletely understood. This longitudinal fun...
The neural correlates of aphasic errors in spontaneous language are largely unknown. The impact of t...
Verbal stimuli often induce right-hemispheric activation in patients with aphasia after left-hemisph...
textFunctional neuroimaging research on language recovery in patients with aphasia due to left hemis...
textNeuroplasticity research yields mixed results for the differential contribution of perilesional ...
The role of the right hemisphere for language processing and successful therapeutic interventions in...
In post-stroke aphasia, language tasks recruit a combination of residual regions within the canonica...
Our understanding of post-stroke language function is largely based on older age groups, who show in...
Deficits in phonology are among the most common and persistent impairments in aphasia after left hem...
Understanding the neural mechanism that supports preserved language processing in aphasia has implic...
Changes in brain connectivity during language therapy were examined among participants with aphasia ...
The role of the two hemispheres in the neurorehabilitation of language is still under dispute. This ...
The left hemisphere (LH) is accepted as the dominant hemisphere for language processing. There is al...
Brain lesions are known to elicit reorganization of function in representational cortex. Using lingu...
AIM: Little is known about how treatment affects the neural substrate of language function in stroke...
The loss and recovery of language functions are still incompletely understood. This longitudinal fun...