All Relations between prosody and right cerebral hemisphere

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Marc D Pel. Judging emotion and attitudes from prosody following brain damage. Progress in brain research. vol 156. 2007-01-18. PMID:17015088. research has long indicated a role for the right hemisphere in the decoding of basic emotions from speech prosody, although there are few data on how the right hemisphere is implicated in processes for understanding the emotive "attitudes" of a speaker from prosody. 2007-01-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
Marc D Pel. Judging emotion and attitudes from prosody following brain damage. Progress in brain research. vol 156. 2007-01-18. PMID:17015088. our data emphasize a central role for the right hemisphere in the ability to appreciate emotions and speaker attitudes from prosody, although the precise source of these social-pragmatic deficits may arise in different ways in the context of right hemisphere compromise. 2007-01-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
Michal Harciarek, Kenneth M Heilman, Krzysztof Jodzi. Defective comprehension of emotional faces and prosody as a result of right hemisphere stroke: modality versus emotion-type specificity. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS. vol 12. issue 6. 2006-12-20. PMID:17064441. defective comprehension of emotional faces and prosody as a result of right hemisphere stroke: modality versus emotion-type specificity. 2006-12-20 2023-08-12 human
Michal Harciarek, Kenneth M Heilman, Krzysztof Jodzi. Defective comprehension of emotional faces and prosody as a result of right hemisphere stroke: modality versus emotion-type specificity. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS. vol 12. issue 6. 2006-12-20. PMID:17064441. studies of patients with brain damage, as well as studies with normal subjects have revealed that the right hemisphere is important for recognizing emotions expressed by faces and prosody. 2006-12-20 2023-08-12 human
Yoko Warabi, Mitsuaki Bandoh, Hiroshi Kurisaki, Shinichi Nishio, Hideaki Hayash. [Transcortical sensory aphasia due to extensive infarction of left cerebral hemisphere]. Rinsho shinkeigaku = Clinical neurology. vol 46. issue 5. 2006-10-17. PMID:16886797. furthermore, we suggest that this patient presented dissociative aphasia that all the process of repetition and the function of linguistic and emotional prosody were represented in the right hemisphere and the other functions including comprehension of word meanings were existed in the left hemisphere. 2006-10-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Fumitaka Homae, Hama Watanabe, Tamami Nakano, Kayo Asakawa, Gentaro Tag. The right hemisphere of sleeping infant perceives sentential prosody. Neuroscience research. vol 54. issue 4. 2006-05-10. PMID:16427714. the right hemisphere of sleeping infant perceives sentential prosody. 2006-05-10 2023-08-12 human
Lee X Blonder, Kenneth M Heilman, Timothy Ketterson, John Rosenbek, Anastasia Raymer, Bruce Crosson, Lynn Maher, Robert Glueckauf, Leslie Gonzalez Roth. Affective facial and lexical expression in aprosodic versus aphasic stroke patients. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS. vol 11. issue 6. 2006-01-17. PMID:16248903. past research has shown that lesions in the left cerebral hemisphere often result in aphasia, while lesions in the right hemisphere frequently impair the production of emotional prosody and facial expression. 2006-01-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Sophie van Rijn, André Aleman, Eric van Diessen, Celine Berckmoes, Guy Vingerhoets, René S Kah. What is said or how it is said makes a difference: role of the right fronto-parietal operculum in emotional prosody as revealed by repetitive TMS. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 21. issue 11. 2005-08-24. PMID:15978028. we investigated the role of the fronto-parietal operculum, a somatosensory area where the lips, tongue and jaw are represented, in the right hemisphere to detection of emotion in prosody vs. semantics. 2005-08-24 2023-08-12 human
John C Rosenbek, Gregory P Crucian, Susan A Leon, Bethany Hieber, Amy D Rodriguez, Beth Holiway, Timothy U Ketterson, Maribel Ciampitti, Kenneth Heilman, Leslie Gonzalez-Roth. Novel treatments for expressive aprosodia: a phase I investigation of cognitive linguistic and imitative interventions. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS. vol 10. issue 5. 2004-10-25. PMID:15327724. this study investigated two mechanism-based treatments for expressive aprosodia, a disturbance in emotional prosody thought to be governed by the right hemisphere. 2004-10-25 2023-08-12 human
Judy Perkins Walker, Rebecca Pelletier, Lindsay Rei. The production of linguistic prosodic structures in subjects with right hemisphere damage. Clinical linguistics & phonetics. vol 18. issue 2. 2004-07-01. PMID:15086132. this study examined the right hemisphere contribution to the production of linguistic prosody where acoustic features of prosodic structures in different linguistic contexts were examined accompanied by perceptual judgements. 2004-07-01 2023-08-12 human
Judy Perkins Walker, Rebecca Pelletier, Lindsay Rei. The production of linguistic prosodic structures in subjects with right hemisphere damage. Clinical linguistics & phonetics. vol 18. issue 2. 2004-07-01. PMID:15086132. when control and right hemisphere damaged (rhd) subjects were asked to produce lexical stress differences (experiment 1), prosodic boundaries to denote syntactic constituents (experiment 2), and questions and statements (experiment 3) conveyed through prosody, both groups were similar in producing the duration, f0 and amplitude acoustic cues within prosodic structures to convey different linguistic meanings. 2004-07-01 2023-08-12 human
Judy Perkins Walker, Rebecca Pelletier, Lindsay Rei. The production of linguistic prosodic structures in subjects with right hemisphere damage. Clinical linguistics & phonetics. vol 18. issue 2. 2004-07-01. PMID:15086132. these findings, which suggest that the right hemisphere has a limited role in the production of linguistic prosody, are discussed in relation to perceptual theories of prosody. 2004-07-01 2023-08-12 human
Sonja A Kotz, Martin Meyer, Kai Alter, Mireille Besson, D Yves von Cramon, Angela D Friederic. On the lateralization of emotional prosody: an event-related functional MR investigation. Brain and language. vol 86. issue 3. 2003-12-01. PMID:12972367. the current results call into question an exclusive right hemisphere lateralization of emotional prosody and expand patient data on the functional role of the basal ganglia during the perception of emotional prosody. 2003-12-01 2023-08-12 human
John B Williamson, David W Harrison, Brian V Shenal, Robert Rhodes, Heath A Demare. Quantitative EEG diagnostic confirmation of expressive aprosodia. Applied neuropsychology. vol 10. issue 3. 2003-11-12. PMID:12890643. previous research has indicated that expressive deficits in prosody can be caused by cerebral damage to the right hemisphere region homologous to broca's area. 2003-11-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Kathryn Hird, Kim Kirsne. The effect of right cerebral hemisphere damage on collaborative planning in conversation: an analysis of intentional structure. Clinical linguistics & phonetics. vol 17. issue 4-5. 2003-09-17. PMID:12945606. the results revealed that speakers with right cerebral hemisphere damage do not, first, use prosody to alert listeners to changes in discourse structure, and, second, assume equal responsibility for the development and maintenance discourse structure. 2003-09-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
John J Sidtis, Diana Van Lancker Sidti. A neurobehavioral approach to dysprosody. Seminars in speech and language. vol 24. issue 2. 2003-08-19. PMID:12709883. much of the recent emphasis on prosody (the melody and rhythm of speech) and its disorders (dysprosody) has been on cognitive-affective functions attributed to cortical areas of the right cerebral hemisphere, with little further behavioral or neuroanatomical specification. 2003-08-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
Rachel L C Mitchell, Rebecca Elliott, Martin Barry, Alan Cruttenden, Peter W R Woodruf. The neural response to emotional prosody, as revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging. Neuropsychologia. vol 41. issue 10. 2003-07-15. PMID:12757912. in confirming the results of lesion and neuropsychological studies, the current study emphasises the importance of the right hemisphere in the processing of emotional prosody, specifically the lateral temporal lobes. 2003-07-15 2023-08-12 human
Katarzyna Kucharska-Pietura, Mary L Phillips, Wojciech Gernand, Anthony S Davi. Perception of emotions from faces and voices following unilateral brain damage. Neuropsychologia. vol 41. issue 8. 2003-06-04. PMID:12667543. the results showed that right hemisphere patients were markedly impaired relative to left hemisphere and healthy controls on test performance: labelling and recognition of facial expressions and recognition of emotions conveyed by prosody. 2003-06-04 2023-08-12 human
Katarzyna Kucharska-Pietura, Mary L Phillips, Wojciech Gernand, Anthony S Davi. Perception of emotions from faces and voices following unilateral brain damage. Neuropsychologia. vol 41. issue 8. 2003-06-04. PMID:12667543. however, on the prosody test the lhd patients showed significant impairment, performing mid-way between the right hemisphere patients and healthy comparison group. 2003-06-04 2023-08-12 human
Frank R Boutsen, Sarah S Christma. Prosody in apraxia of speech. Seminars in speech and language. vol 23. issue 4. 2003-03-21. PMID:12461724. extrinsic prosody is processed primarily by right hemisphere (rh) mechanisms and involves manipulation of intonation across longer perceptual groupings. 2003-03-21 2023-08-12 Not clear