All Relations between prosody and right cerebral hemisphere

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Joy H Wymer, Linda S Lindman, Randee L Books. A neuropsychological perspective of aprosody: features, function, assessment, and treatment. Applied neuropsychology. vol 9. issue 1. 2003-02-04. PMID:12173749. a review of the literature suggests that the left hemisphere is responsible for modulating the linguistic components of prosody (e.g., timing), whereas the right hemisphere is predominantly responsible for modulating the affective components of prosody (e.g., spectral information or pitch). 2003-02-04 2023-08-12 Not clear
J P Walker, K Fongemie, T Daigl. Prosodic facilitation in the resolution of syntactic ambiguities in subjects with left and right hemisphere damage. Brain and language. vol 78. issue 2. 2001-10-04. PMID:11500068. the purpose of this study was to determine if prosody facilitates the comprehension of sentences containing temporary syntactic ambiguities in control, and left (lhd) and right hemisphere damaged (rhd) subjects. 2001-10-04 2023-08-12 human
H Lausberg, M Davis, A Rothenhäusle. Hemispheric specialization in spontaneous gesticulation in a patient with callosal disconnection. Neuropsychologia. vol 38. issue 12. 2001-08-09. PMID:11074088. gestures with emotional connotation and batons (emphasizing prosody) were generated predominantly in the right hemisphere whereas physiographics which picture the linguistic content concretely and deictics (pointing) were of left-hemispheric origin. 2001-08-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
R Adolphs, D Trane. Intact recognition of emotional prosody following amygdala damage. Neuropsychologia. vol 37. issue 11. 2000-02-17. PMID:10530728. one of the bilateral amygdala subjects, whose lesions were restricted to the amygdala, was entirely normal in recognizing emotion in prosody on all tasks, the other, whose damage included substantial lesions also in extra-amygdalar structures, especially in right hemisphere, was normal on most, albeit not all, measures of emotional prosody recognition. 2000-02-17 2023-08-12 human
R Adolphs, D Trane. Intact recognition of emotional prosody following amygdala damage. Neuropsychologia. vol 37. issue 11. 2000-02-17. PMID:10530728. we suggest that the human amygdala's role in recognizing emotion in prosody may not be as critical as it is for facial expressions, and that extra-amygdalar structures in right hemisphere may be more important for recognizing emotional prosody. 2000-02-17 2023-08-12 human
A M Barrett, G P Crucian, A M Raymer, K M Heilma. Spared comprehension of emotional prosody in a patient with global aphasia. Neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and behavioral neurology. vol 12. issue 2. 1999-06-15. PMID:10223259. several studies have demonstrated that patients with right hemisphere damage, when compared with left-hemisphere damaged controls, are impaired at comprehending emotional prosody. 1999-06-15 2023-08-12 human
A Balan, J Gandou. Effect of sentence length on the production of linguistic stress by left- and right-hemisphere-damaged patients. Brain and language. vol 67. issue 2. 1999-05-04. PMID:10092343. findings are brought to bear on the nature of the stress production deficit after unilateral brain damage, the role of the right hemisphere in linguistic prosody, and the concept of "subtle phonetic deficit" in fluent aphasia. 1999-05-04 2023-08-12 human
K M Heilman, R L Gilmor. Cortical influences in emotion. Journal of clinical neurophysiology : official publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society. vol 15. issue 5. 1999-02-12. PMID:9821068. whereas deficits of the left hemisphere appear to impair the comprehension and expression of propositional language, deficits of the right hemisphere may be associated with an impaired ability to comprehend and express emotional gestures such as facial expression and emotional prosody. 1999-02-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
N L Cadieux, K W Grev. Emotion processing in Alzheimer's disease. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS. vol 3. issue 5. 1997-10-23. PMID:9322399. this study sought to determine if some ad patients have a disruption in a specific right hemisphere emotion processing system, and to determine if the processing of emotional facial expression is more vulnerable to the pathology of ad than is the perception of emotional prosody. 1997-10-23 2023-08-12 Not clear
F Vargha-Khadem, L J Carr, E Isaacs, E Brett, C Adams, M Mishki. Onset of speech after left hemispherectomy in a nine-year-old boy. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 120 ( Pt 1). 1997-03-25. PMID:9055805. although the findings in alex, as in other left-hemispherectomized patients, indicate define limits to the cognitive and linguistic capacity of the isolated right hemisphere, alex's achievements appear to challenge the widely held view that early childhood is a particularly critical period for acquisition of speech and language or any of their selective aspects, including phonology, grammar, prosody and semantics. 1997-03-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
M S George, P I Parekh, N Rosinsky, T A Ketter, T A Kimbrell, K M Heilman, P Herscovitch, R M Pos. Understanding emotional prosody activates right hemisphere regions. Archives of neurology. vol 53. issue 7. 1996-11-26. PMID:8929174. understanding emotional prosody activates right hemisphere regions. 1996-11-26 2023-08-12 human
M J Cohen, W B Branch, G W Hyn. Receptive prosody in children with left or right hemisphere dysfunction. Brain and language. vol 47. issue 2. 1994-12-02. PMID:7953612. receptive prosody in children with left or right hemisphere dysfunction. 1994-12-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
J Shield. Semantic-pragmatic disorder: a right hemisphere syndrome? The British journal of disorders of communication. vol 26. issue 3. 1992-06-23. PMID:1814422. following right hemisphere lesions, adults' speech can become copious and inappropriate, with abnormal prosody, and they may be unable to comprehend metaphor or humour. 1992-06-23 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Lalande, C M Braun, N Charlebois, H A Whitake. Effects of right and left hemisphere cerebrovascular lesions on discrimination of prosodic and semantic aspects of affect in sentences. Brain and language. vol 42. issue 2. 1992-04-09. PMID:1540823. the right hemisphere (rh) patients were significantly impaired, relative to the left hemisphere (lh) patients and normals, on the pure prosody task (2) and on the emotional concordance task (3), the latter effect being significant only for mismatch categorization. 1992-04-09 2023-08-11 human
B Brådvik, C Dravins, S Holtås, I Rosén, E Ryding, D H Ingva. Disturbances of speech prosody following right hemisphere infarcts. Acta neurologica Scandinavica. vol 84. issue 2. 1991-12-26. PMID:1719738. however, it was not possible to find support for the hypothesis that the organization of prosody in the right hemisphere mirrors that of propositional speech on the left side. 1991-12-26 2023-08-11 Not clear
L X Blonder, D Bowers, K M Heilma. The role of the right hemisphere in emotional communication. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 114 ( Pt 3). 1991-08-15. PMID:2065243. previous research has established that patients with right hemisphere damage (rhd) are impaired in the comprehension of emotional prosody and facial expression. 1991-08-15 2023-08-11 human
A E Cancelliere, A Kertes. Lesion localization in acquired deficits of emotional expression and comprehension. Brain and cognition. vol 13. issue 2. 1990-10-02. PMID:1697174. twenty-eight right hemisphere strokes, 18 left hemisphere strokes, and 20 controls were examined on a standardized test of the expression, repetition, and comprehension of emotional prosody as well as the visual recognition of emotional situations and faces. 1990-10-02 2023-08-11 Not clear
M Semrud-Clikeman, G W Hyn. Right hemispheric dysfunction in nonverbal learning disabilities: social, academic, and adaptive functioning in adults and children. Psychological bulletin. vol 107. issue 2. 1990-05-07. PMID:2181523. involvement of right hemispheric dysfunction in these disabilities has been hypothesized, as studies with adults have suggested that documented right hemisphere damage may lead to deficits in social skills, prosody, spatial orientation, problem solving, and recognition of nonverbal cues. 1990-05-07 2023-08-11 Not clear
M Cohen, A Prather, P Town, G Hyn. Neurodevelopmental differences in emotional prosody in normal children and children with left and right temporal lobe epilepsy. Brain and language. vol 38. issue 1. 1990-03-28. PMID:2302542. emotional prosody, which has been defined as the emotional aspects of speech which communicate pleasure, fear, sorrow, anger, etc., has been demonstrated to be primarily a function of the nondominant hemisphere (typically, the right hemisphere) in adult populations. 1990-03-28 2023-08-11 Not clear
W L Bell, D L Davis, A Morgan-Fisher, E D Ros. Acquired aprosodia in children. Journal of child neurology. vol 5. issue 1. 1990-03-08. PMID:2299134. in adults, the affective components of language, including certain aspects of prosody and gesturing, appear to be a dominant function of the right hemisphere. 1990-03-08 2023-08-11 Not clear