Inconsistent language lateralisation – testing the dissociable language laterality hypothesis using behaviour and lateralised cerebral blood flow
<strong>Background<br></strong> 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 r...
Autors principals: | Parker, AJ, Woodhead, ZVJ, Carey, DP, Groen, MA, Gutierrez-Sigut, E, Hodgson, J, Hudson, J, Karlsson, EM, MacSweeney, M, Payne, H, Simpson, N, Thompson, PA, Watkins, KE, Egan, C, Grant, JH, Harte, S, Hudson, BT, Sablik, M, Badcock, NA, Bishop, DVM |
---|---|
Altres autors: | COLA consortium |
Format: | Journal article |
Idioma: | English |
Publicat: |
Elsevier
2022
|
Ítems similars
-
Investigation into inconsistent lateralisation of language functions as a potential risk factor for language impairment
per: Bradshaw, AR, et al.
Publicat: (2019) -
Cerebral lateralisation of first and second languages in bilinguals assessed using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound
per: Bishop, DVM, et al.
Publicat: (2016) -
Inconsistent lateralisation of language functions: a risk factor for language impairment?
per: Bradshaw, A, et al.
Publicat: (2019) -
Cerebral lateralisation during signed and spoken language production in children born deaf
per: Heather Payne, et al.
Publicat: (2019-04-01) -
Approaches to measuring language lateralisation: an exploratory study comparing two fMRI methods and functional transcranial doppler ultrasound
per: Bishop, DVM, et al.
Publicat: (2024)