Results 251 to 260 of about 73,590 (291)
Tone disruptions in Mandarin post-stroke aphasia: an fNIRS study on Broca's area using the auditory oddball paradigm. [PDF]
Zhan L, Lv W, Yin L, Guo C, Lu C.
europepmc +1 more source
Translational Evaluation of a Machine Learning-Based Interactive Lab for Aphasia Rehabilitation in Post Stroke Patients. [PDF]
Kumar M, Wu RZ, Yeh SC, Wu EH, Tsai PY.
europepmc +1 more source
A left basal ganglia lesion in a 57‐year‐old patient
Brain Pathology, Volume 36, Issue 2, March 2026.
Samir Atiya +3 more
wiley +1 more source
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Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 2021
Subcortical structures have long been thought to play a role in language processing. Increasingly spirited debates on language studies, arising from as early as the nineteenth century, grew remarkably sophisticated as the years pass. In the context of non-thalamic aphasia, a few theoretical frameworks have been laid out.
Marcia Radanovic, Victor N Almeida
openaire +2 more sources
Subcortical structures have long been thought to play a role in language processing. Increasingly spirited debates on language studies, arising from as early as the nineteenth century, grew remarkably sophisticated as the years pass. In the context of non-thalamic aphasia, a few theoretical frameworks have been laid out.
Marcia Radanovic, Victor N Almeida
openaire +2 more sources
Epilepsia, 1988
Summary: Forty cases of paroxysmal aphasia were found in a sample of 4,000 patients with epilepsy. Twenty‐five had structural brain damage demonstrated by CT scan. Except for two cases, the epileptic focus was located in the left hemisphere. Two patients had a paroxysmal alexia associated with the aphasic disorder. Though preliminary, our data suggest
A, Ardila, M V, Lopez
openaire +2 more sources
Summary: Forty cases of paroxysmal aphasia were found in a sample of 4,000 patients with epilepsy. Twenty‐five had structural brain damage demonstrated by CT scan. Except for two cases, the epileptic focus was located in the left hemisphere. Two patients had a paroxysmal alexia associated with the aphasic disorder. Though preliminary, our data suggest
A, Ardila, M V, Lopez
openaire +2 more sources
Neurology, 1986
We document a case of isolated epileptic aphasia with clear correlation between episodic clinical and electrographic events. This disorder is rarely recognized, perhaps because it is obscured by ictal motor activity or speech arrest, or by the lack of clinical manifestations if the seizure occurs when the patient is not attempting to speak.
D H, Rosenbaum +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
We document a case of isolated epileptic aphasia with clear correlation between episodic clinical and electrographic events. This disorder is rarely recognized, perhaps because it is obscured by ictal motor activity or speech arrest, or by the lack of clinical manifestations if the seizure occurs when the patient is not attempting to speak.
D H, Rosenbaum +3 more
openaire +2 more sources

