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Effects of Age on American Sign Language Sentence Repetition
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In: Psychol Aging (2020)
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A human neurodevelopmental model for Williams syndrome.
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In: Nature, vol 536, iss 7616 (2016)
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A human neurodevelopmental model for Williams syndrome.
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In: Nature, vol 536, iss 7616 (2016)
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Musicality Correlates With Sociability and Emotionality in Williams Syndrome
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Neural Basis of Action Understanding: Evidence from Sign Language Aphasia
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Intelligence in Williams Syndrome is related to STX1A, which encodes a component of the presynaptic SNARE complex.
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In: PloS one, vol 5, iss 4 (2010)
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Intelligence in Williams Syndrome Is Related to STX1A, Which Encodes a Component of the Presynaptic SNARE Complex
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Neural Dissociation in the Production of Lexical versus Classifier Signs in ASL: Distinct Patterns of Hemispheric Asymmetry
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Abstract:
We examine the hemispheric organization for the production of two classes of ASL signs, lexical signs and classifier signs. Previous work has found strong left hemisphere dominance for the production of lexical signs, but several authors have speculated that classifier signs may involve the right hemisphere to a greater degree because they can represent spatial information in a topographic, non-categorical manner. Twenty-one unilaterally brain damaged signers (13 left hemisphere damaged, 8 right hemisphere damaged) were presented with a story narration task designed to elicit both lexical and classifier signs. Relative frequencies of the two types of errors were tabulated. Left hemisphere damaged signers produced significantly more lexical errors than did right hemisphere damaged signers, whereas the reverse pattern held for classifier signs. Our findings argue for different patterns of hemispheric asymmetry for these two classes of ASL signs. We suggest that the requirement to encode analogue spatial information in the production of classifier signs results in the increased involvement of the right hemisphere systems.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2008.09.009 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18929583 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2667203
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Neural Organization of Linguistic Short-Term Memory is Sensory Modality-Dependent: Evidence from Signed and Spoken Language
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