Results 141 to 150 of about 26,958 (202)
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Hypothesis on cerebral dominance

Neuropsychologia, 1975
Abstract We hypothesize that cerebral dominance is a continuous process which evolves throughout life and which accounts for the age-dependent forms of aphasia. In addition to progressive (left) language lateralization, there may also be a continuing specification within the wider left hemispheric speech zone.
J W, Brown, J, Jaffe
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Cerebral Dominance for Consciousness

Archives of Neurology, 1976
In a prospective study we evaluated the relationship of level of consciousness to hemispheric side of lesion following acute cerebrovascular injury. Fifty-seven percent of patients with left hemispheric lesions had initial impairment of consciousness, in contrast to 25% with right-sided damage.
M L, Albert   +3 more
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Venous Patterns of Cerebral Dominance

New England Journal of Medicine, 1972
Giovanni Di Chiro
exaly   +3 more sources

THE ONTOGENY OF CEREBRAL DOMINANCE

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1975
It has long been known that in most people the language function depends on the activity of the left cerebral hemisphere. It is clear that language develops from a base state of no language. But does language lateralization analogously develop from a base state of no lateralization? It has been generally assumed that this is so.
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Dominant inheritance of cerebral gigantism

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1977
Cerebral gigantism is a syndrome consisting of characteristic dysmorphic features, accelerated growth in early childhood, and variable degrees of mental retardation. Its etiology and pathogenesis have not been defined. Three families are presented with multiple affected members.
Zonana, Jonathan   +5 more
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Cerebral dominance in aphasia recovery

Brain and Language, 1979
Abstract This investigation studied the patterns of ear preference of a group of 25 aphasic adults through the administration of two verbal dichotic tests and retests over a 2-month interval of time. These dichotic tests were a Dichotic Digits Test (DDT) and a Dichotic Animal Names Test (DANT).
J M, Pettit, J D, Noll
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Cerebral Dominance in Musicians and Nonmusicians

The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 1974
Musically experienced listeners recognize simple melodies better in the right ear than the left, while the reverse is true for naive listeners. Hence, contrary to previous reports, music perception supports the hypothesis that the left hemisphere is dominant for analytic processing and the right hemisphere for holistic processing.
T G, Bever, R J, Chiarello
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THE CONCEPT OF CEREBRAL CHEMICAL DOMINANCE

International Journal of Neuroscience, 2003
The study assessed the biochemical differences between right hemispheric dominant and left hemispheric dominant individuals detected by handedness and the dichotic listening test. The isoprenoid metabolites--digoxin, dolichol, and ubiquinone, glycoconjugate metabolism, free radical metabolism, and the RBC membrane composition were studied in ...
Rave Kumar, Kurup   +1 more
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THE SEARCH FOR CEREBRAL DOMINANCE IN MONKEYS*

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1976
Twelve monkeys with statistically significant and consistent manual preferences on three handedness tests were subjected to unilateral ablations in the association cortex. Eight received lesions in the foveal prestriate cortex, and four lesions in the dorsolateral frontal cortex; half the subjects in each group were operated on the dominant, and half ...
J M, Warren, A J, Nonneman
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