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1
Using prosody to resolve temporary syntactic ambiguities in speech production: acoustic data on brain-damaged speakers
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 15 (2001) 6, 441-456
OLC Linguistik
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2
Using prosody to resolve temporary syntactic ambiguities in speech production : acoustic data on brain-damaged speakers
In: Clinical linguistics & phonetics. - London : Informa Healthcare 15 (2001) 6, 441-456
BLLDB
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3
The neural bases of prosody : insights from lesion studies and neuroimaging
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 13 (1999) 8, 581-608
BLLDB
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4
Production of affective and linguistic prosody by brain-damaged patients
In: Aphasiology. - London [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 11 (1997) 2, 177-198
BLLDB
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5
Unilateral brain damage, prosodic comprehension deficits, and the acoustic cues to prosody
In: Brain & language. - Orlando, Fla. [u.a.] : Elsevier 57 (1997) 2, 195-214
BLLDB
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6
Current studies of right hemisphere function
Sidtis, Diana (Hrsg.); Bogen, Joseph E. (Mitarb.); Cummings, Jeffrey L (Mitarb.)...
In: Brain & language. - Orlando, Fla. [u.a.] : Elsevier 57 (1997) 1, 1-178
BLLDB
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7
The ability of right- and left-hemisphere damaged individuals to produce and interpret prosodic cues marking phrasal boundaries
In: Language and speech. - London [u.a.] : Sage Publ. 40 (1997) 4, 313-330
BLLDB
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8
An acoustic characterization of speech prosody in right-hemisphere-damaged patients : interactive effects of focus distribution, sentence modality, and emotional context
Pell, Marc D.. - : McGill University, 1997
BASE
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9
The perception and comprehension of intonation by brain-damaged adults in linguistic and affective contexts /
Pell, Marc D.. - : McGill University, 1993
Abstract: Tasks testing linguistic and affective prosody were administered to nine right-hemisphere-damaged (RHD), ten left-hemisphere-damaged (LHD), and ten age-matched control (NC) subjects. Two tasks measured subjects' abilities to make same/different judgments about prosodic patterns which had been filtered of the linguistic content, while six tasks required subjects to identify typical linguistic or affective meanings for intonation contours. The six identification tasks varied in the amount of linguistic structure available to subjects during auditory perception; stimuli were either filtered of their phonetic content, presented as nonsense utterances, or provided appropriate semantic information which biased the prosodic target. Unilateral damage to either cerebral hemisphere did not impair subjects' ability to discriminate prosodic patterns, or to recognize the affective mood conveyed through prosody. Contrary to expectation, RHD patients performed comparably in both propositional and affective contexts, and thus did not show evidence of a specific disturbance of emotional prosody. LHD patients, however, were differentially impaired on linguistic tasks rather than emotional tasks when compared to the NC group, even when semantic information biased the target response. The results are discussed with respect to theories of lateralized processing of linguistic and affective prosody.
Keyword: Biology; Language; Linguistics; Neuroscience; Psychobiology; Psychology
URL: http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=69735
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