All Relations between semantics and right cerebral hemisphere

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
T V Chernigovskaya, L J Balonov, V L Degli. Bilingualism and brain functional asymmetry. Brain and language. vol 20. issue 2. 1984-01-27. PMID:6227372. it was established that in such a bilingual type the right hemisphere is concerned with the formation of deep semantic structures of the native language while the left hemisphere is responsible for the formation of second language deep structures and of surface structures of both languages. 1984-01-27 2023-08-12 Not clear
J J Sidtis, B T Volpe, D H Wilson, M Rayport, M S Gazzanig. Variability in right hemisphere language function after callosal section: evidence for a continuum of generative capacity. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. vol 1. issue 3. 1981-10-29. PMID:7264722. while the right hemisphere language systems in both patients were shown to be capable of semantic information processing, they differed in their abilities to process phonetic information, follow verbal commands, and produce linguistic responses. 1981-10-29 2023-08-12 Not clear
J J Sidtis, B T Volpe, J D Holtzman, D H Wilson, M S Gazzanig. Cognitive interaction after staged callosal section: evidence for transfer of semantic activation. Science (New York, N.Y.). vol 212. issue 4492. 1981-05-26. PMID:6782673. after the initial posterior section was made, there was no evidence of interhemispheric sensory transfer, although the left hemisphere did have access to stimulus-related semantic and episodic information from the right hemisphere. 1981-05-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
K M Heilman, L Rothi, D Campanella, S Wolfso. Wernicke's and global aphasia without alexia. Archives of neurology. vol 36. issue 3. 1979-06-29. PMID:435133. we propose that the right hemisphere in some individuals may be capable of extracting semantic information from iconic images (ideogram) without phonological processing. 1979-06-29 2023-08-11 Not clear
D Elghozi, E Strube, J L Signoret, J Cambier, F Lhermitt. [Quasi-aphasia associated with thalamic lesions: relation between the language disorder and elective activation of the left hemisphere in 4 cases of left and right thalamic lesions]. Revue neurologique. vol 134. issue 10. 1979-06-29. PMID:749118. the semantic paraphasia could be related to the intrusion of the right hemisphere apparatus into language, because of the lack of balance between the activation of each of the two hemispheres. 1979-06-29 2023-08-11 Not clear
G Gainotti, C Caltagirone, G Micel. Semantic disorders of auditory language comprehension in right brain-damaged patients. Journal of psycholinguistic research. vol 8. issue 1. 1979-05-23. PMID:423145. confirmation of the hypothesis was obtained, but the relationship between semantic errors and lesion of the right hemisphere did not seem a simple and direct one. 1979-05-23 2023-08-11 Not clear
J Da. Right-hemisphere language processing in normal right-handers. Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance. vol 3. issue 3. 1977-09-22. PMID:886282. experiments 2 and 3 demonstrated the right hemisphere's ability to detect semantic relationships between concrete nouns and their superordinate categories. 1977-09-22 2023-08-11 Not clear
J Levy, C Trevarthe. Perceptual, semantic and phonetic aspects of elementary language processes in split-brain patients. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 100 Pt 1. 1977-07-29. PMID:861710. we found that the right hemisphere was dominant for the visual recognition of words when no semantic or phonetic decoding was required. 1977-07-29 2023-08-11 Not clear
C Heeschen, R Jürgen. Pragmatic-semantic and syntactic factors influencing ear differences in dichotic listening. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 13. issue 1. 1977-05-12. PMID:844310. but it is possible that the two hemispheres differ in the manner in which they make use of semantic structures: the left hemisphere in a selective manner, appropriate for the solution of a specific task, and the right hemisphere in a more diffuse and global manner. 1977-05-12 2023-08-11 Not clear
T A Dobrokhotova, N N Bragina, T O Falle. [Consciousness disorders in focal lesions of the right and left cerebral hemispheres]. Zhurnal nevropatologii i psikhiatrii imeni S.S. Korsakova (Moscow, Russia : 1952). vol 75. issue 12. 1976-04-19. PMID:1217360. this clinical fact is taken as a basis for the assumption that in the formation of consciousness both hemispheres in different ways play a certain role and they provide different "formating" kinds of consciousness: the right hemisphere--a direct perception or a sensory perception of the environment and itself, the left--process of abstract perception based on speech, symbols, semantics. 1976-04-19 2023-08-11 human
J B Hellig. Hemispheric processing differences revealed by differential conditioning and reaction time performance. Journal of experimental psychology. General. vol 104. issue 4. 1976-02-09. PMID:1194859. more importantly, the conditioning performance of cs was more influenced by the semantic attributes of the stimuli when they were presented directly to the right visual field (left hemisphere) than when they were presented directly to the left visual field (right hemisphere). 1976-02-09 2023-08-11 human