Results 291 to 300 of about 78,305 (332)
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Impaired Cerebral Dominance and Schizophrenia
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1981SummaryA total of 150 psychiatric patients—schizophrenics, affective psychotics and neurotics—were compared with 150 normal controls for handedness. Schizophrenics were significantly more likely to be non-dextrals (i.e. not completely right handed) than controls. Affective psychotics and neurotics were not significantly different from controls.
V B, Chaugule, R S, Master
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Archives of Neurology, 1977
In Reply.— Dr Stoney's comments are interesting, given that he cites so many thoughtful neuroscientists. However, his comments are unrelated to the point of our article. Dr Stoney complains that we have not given "consciousness" the broad general definition it deserves. He is correct. We did not try to.
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In Reply.— Dr Stoney's comments are interesting, given that he cites so many thoughtful neuroscientists. However, his comments are unrelated to the point of our article. Dr Stoney complains that we have not given "consciousness" the broad general definition it deserves. He is correct. We did not try to.
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Cerebral Dominance and Auditory Asymmetry
The Journal of Psychology, 1964(1964). Cerebral Dominance and Auditory Asymmetry. The Journal of Psychology: Vol. 58, No. 1, pp. 157-167.
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Cerebral Dominance and Anatomic Asymmetry
New England Journal of Medicine, 1972Among Paul Broca's important contributions one of the most dramatic was the demonstration that aphasias resulted almost exclusively from lesions of the left hemisphere.
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Cerebral dominance and reading habits
Nature, 1975FREQUENTLY when an Israeli provides travel information in Hebrew, he points in one direction while simultaneously naming its opposite, for example he points to the left while saying: “You must turn right”. When this contradictory behaviour is brought to his attention, he excuses himself and either points in the direction he had verbally indicated or ...
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Cerebral dominance and stuttering
Journal of Fluency Disorders, 1980The purpose of this paper is to review some of the salient aspects of cerebral dominance vis-a-vis stuttering. It is not my intention to profess knowing why people stutter or to claim any particular truthfinding mechanism. I present data pertaining to cerebral laterality in stutterers and conclude with how an altered state of cerebral laterality may ...
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[Cerebral hemisphere dominance].
Zentralblatt fur Neurochirurgie, 1984There is a functional asymmetry of the human brain. This division of labour is brought about by the enormous complexity of the cerebral performances and the fundamental incompatibility between the analytical functions on the one hand and the synthetic functions on the other.
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