Home
Catalogue search
Refine your search:
Keyword
Creator / Publisher:
Alku, P (1)
Amélie, Brisebois (1)
Anderson Dick, Smidarle (1)
Blair, Olivia (1)
Brenda Hanna-Pladdy (1)
Brian Herman (1)
Chenery, HJ (1)
Choi, Hyun (1)
Glynn, Peter A. (1)
Haffey, Spenser (1)
more
Year
Medium
Type
BLLDB-Access
Search in the Catalogues and Directories
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
AND
OR
AND NOT
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
AND
OR
AND NOT
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
AND
OR
AND NOT
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
AND
OR
AND NOT
All fields
Title
Creator / Publisher
Keyword
Year
Sort by
creator [A → Z]
'
creator [Z → A]
'
publishing year ↑ (asc)
'
publishing year ↓ (desc)
'
title [A → Z]
'
title [Z → A]
'
Simple Search
Hits 1 – 7 of 7
1
The contribution of white matter pathology, hypoperfusion, lesion load, and stroke recurrence to language deficits following acute subcortical left hemisphere stroke ...
Sharif, Massoud
. - : Open Science Framework, 2022
BASE
Show details
2
Macrostructural aspects in oral narratives in Brazilian Portuguese by left and right hemisphere stroke patients with low education and low socioeconomic status
Schneider, Fernanda
;
Marcotte, Karine
;
Amélie, Brisebois
. - : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, 2022
BASE
Show details
3
Audiovisual Lexical Retrieval Deficits Following Left Hemisphere Stroke
Brenda Hanna-Pladdy
;
Hyun Choi
;
Brian Herman
...
In: Brain Sciences ; Volume 8 ; Issue 12 (2018)
BASE
Show details
4
Audiovisual Lexical Retrieval Deficits Following Left Hemisphere Stroke ...
Hanna-Pladdy, Brenda
;
Choi, Hyun
;
Herman, Brian
. - : MDPI, 2018
BASE
Show details
5
Changes in task-based effective connectivity in language networks following rehabilitation in post-stroke patients with aphasia
Kiran, Swathi
;
Meier, Erin L.
;
Kapse, Kushal J.
;
Glynn, Peter A.
. - : FRONTIERS RESEARCH FOUNDATION, 2015
Abstract:
In this study, we examined regions in the left and right hemisphere language network that were altered in terms of the underlying neural activation and effective connectivity subsequent to language rehabilitation. Eight persons with chronic post-stroke aphasia and eight normal controls participated in the current study. Patients received a 10 week semantic feature-based rehabilitation program to improve their skills. Therapy was provided on atypical examples of one trained category while two control categories were monitored; the categories were counterbalanced across patients. In each fMRI session, two experimental tasks were conducted: (a) picture naming and (b) semantic feature verification of trained and untrained categories. Analysis of treatment effect sizes revealed that all patients showed greater improvements on the trained category relative to untrained categories. Results from this study show remarkable patterns of consistency despite the inherent variability in lesion size and activation patterns across patients. Across patients, activation that emerged as a function of rehabilitation on the trained category included bilateral IFG, bilateral SFG, LMFG, and LPCG for picture naming; and bilateral IFG, bilateral MFG, LSFG, and bilateral MTG for semantic feature verification. Analysis of effective connectivity using Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) indicated that LIFG was the consistently significantly modulated region after rehabilitation across participants. These results indicate that language networks in patients with aphasia resemble normal language control networks and that this similarity is accentuated by rehabilitation. ; The funding for this project comes from NIDCD/NIH 1P50DC012283 and NIDCD/NIH 1K18DC011517. (1P50DC012283 - NIDCD/NIH; 1K18DC011517 - NIDCD/NIH) ; Published version
Keyword:
10 simple rules
;
Anomia treatment
;
Aphasia
;
Cognitive sciences
;
Dynamic causal modeling
;
Effective connectivity
;
Experimental psychology
;
fMRI activations
;
Functional connectivity
;
Language recovery
;
Left-hemisphere regions
;
Life sciences & biomedicine
;
Naming
;
Naming deficits
;
Neurosciences
;
Neurosciences & neurology
;
Psychology
;
Rehabilitation
;
Science & technology
;
Semantic complexity
;
Social sciences
;
Stroke
URL:
https://hdl.handle.net/2144/40961
http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000356173200001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=6e74115fe3da270499c3d65c9b17d654
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2015.00316
BASE
Hide details
6
The Brain Care Center’s Workbook for Individuals with Aphasia - Take Home Practice for Speech and Language
Blair, Olivia
;
Horricks, Desirae
;
Nowik, Andrea
. - : University of Alberta, 2011
BASE
Show details
7
The mismatch negativity (MMN) response to complex tones and spoken words in individuals with aphasia
Pettigrew, CM
;
Murdoch, BE
;
Kei, J
. - : Psychology Press, 2005
BASE
Show details
Mobile view
All
Catalogues
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
0
IDS Mannheim
0
OLC Linguistik
0
UB Frankfurt Retrokatalog
0
DNB Subject Category Language
0
Institut für Empirische Sprachwissenschaft
0
Leibniz-Centre General Linguistics (ZAS)
0
Bibliographies
BLLDB
0
BDSL
0
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
0
IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung
0
IDS Konnektoren im Deutschen
0
IDS Präpositionen im Deutschen
0
IDS OBELEX meta
0
MPI-SHH Linguistics Collection
0
MPI for Psycholinguistics
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
Annohub
0
Online resources
Link directory
0
Journal directory
0
Database directory
0
Dictionary directory
0
Open access documents
BASE
7
Linguistik-Repository
0
IDS Publikationsserver
0
Online dissertations
0
Language Description Heritage
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik
|
Imprint
|
Privacy Policy
|
Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern