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Language Experience Impacts Brain Activation for Spoken and Signed Language in Infancy: Insights From Unimodal and Bimodal Bilinguals
Beedie, Indie; Coulson-Thaker, Kimberley; Lloyd-Fox, S.. - : MIT Press - Journals, 2020
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2
Computerised speechreading training for deaf children: A randomised controlled trial
Pimperton, H.; Kyle, F. E.; Hulme, C.. - : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, 2019
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3
Sign and speech share partially overlapping conceptual representations
Evans, S.; Gutierrez-Sigut, E.; MacSweeney, M.. - : Cell Press, 2019
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4
Language experience influences audiovisual speech integration in unimodal and bimodal bilingual infants
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5
Impact of language experience on attention to faces in infancy: evidence from unimodal and bimodal bilingual infants
Mercure, E.; Quiroz, I.; Goldberg, L.. - : Frontiers Media, 2018
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6
Eye movements during visual speech perception in deaf and hearing children
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7
How auditory experience differentially influences the function of left and right superior temporal cortices
Waters, D.; Twomey, T.; Evans, S.. - : Society for Neuroscience, 2017
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8
Does congenital deafness affect the structural and functional architecture of primary visual cortex?
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9
The relative contributions of speechreading and vocabulary to deaf and hearing children's reading ability
Kyle, F. E.; Campbell, R.; MacSweeney, M.. - : Elsevier, 2016
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10
Examining the contribution of motor movement and language dominance to increased left lateralization during sign generation in native signers
In: Brain and Language , 159 pp. 109-117. (2016) (2016)
Abstract: The neural systems supporting speech and sign processing are very similar, although not identical. In a previous fTCD study of hearing native signers (Gutierrez-Sigut, Daws, et al., 2015) we found stronger left lateralization for sign than speech. Given that this increased lateralization could not be explained by hand movement alone, the contribution of motor movement versus ‘linguistic’ processes to the strength of hemispheric lateralization during sign production remains unclear. Here we directly contrast lateralization strength of covert versus overt signing during phonological and semantic fluency tasks. To address the possibility that hearing native signers’ elevated lateralization indices (LIs) were due to performing a task in their less dominant language, here we test deaf native signers, whose dominant language is British Sign Language (BSL). Signers were more strongly left lateralized for overt than covert sign generation. However, the strength of lateralization was not correlated with the amount of time producing movements of the right hand. Comparisons with previous data from hearing native English speakers suggest stronger laterality indices for sign than speech in both covert and overt tasks. This increased left lateralization may be driven by specific properties of sign production such as the increased use of self-monitoring mechanisms or the nature of phonological encoding of signs.
Keyword: Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology; BRAIN; Experimental; FLUENCY TASKS; fTCD; HEMISPHERE; IMPACT; Language lateralization; Life Sciences & Biomedicine; Linguistics; NEURAL ORGANIZATION; Neurosciences; Neurosciences & Neurology; Overt language production; Phonological fluency; Psychology; Science & Technology; Semantic fluency; Sign language; Social Sciences; TRANSCRANIAL DOPPLER SONOGRAPHY; ULTRASONOGRAPHY
URL: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1504012/1/1-s2.0-S0093934X16300402-main.pdf
http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1504012/
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11
Does Congenital Deafness Affect the Structural and Functional Architecture of Primary Visual Cortex?
In: Open Neuroimaging Journal , 10 pp. 1-19. (2016) (2016)
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12
Does Congenital Deafness Affect the Structural and Functional Architecture of Primary Visual Cortex?
Smittenaar, C.R.; MacSweeney, M.; Sereno, M.I.. - : Bentham Open, 2016
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13
Stimulus rate increases lateralisation in linguistic and non-linguistic tasks measured by functional transcranial Doppler sonography.
In: Neuropsychologia , 72 59 - 69. (2015) (2015)
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14
Investigating language lateralization during phonological and semantic fluency tasks using functional transcranial Doppler sonography.
In: Laterality , 20 (1) 49 - 68. (2015) (2015)
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15
Language lateralization of hearing native signers: A functional transcranial Doppler sonography (fTCD) study of speech and sign production
In: Brain and Language , 151 pp. 23-34. (2015) (2015)
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16
Identification of the regions involved in phonological assembly using a novel paradigm.
In: Brain and Language, vol. 150, pp. 45-53 (2015)
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17
Microstructural differences in the thalamus and thalamic radiations in the congenitally deaf
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18
Microstructural differences in the thalamus and thalamic radiations in the congenitally deaf.
In: Neuroimage , 100 pp. 347-357. (2014) (2014)
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19
Cochlear implantation (CI) for prelingual deafness: the relevance of studies of brain organization and the role of first language acquisition in considering outcome success.
In: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience , 8 , Article 834 . (2014) (2014)
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20
Speechreading development in deaf and hearing children: Introducing the test of child speechreading
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