Pathologic left-handedness: Does it exist?
- 1 September 1983
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Communication Disorders
- Vol. 16 (5) , 315-344
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0021-9924(83)90016-3
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Why left-handedness?Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1978
- Handedness and the cerebral representation of speechAnnals of Human Biology, 1976
- Hand Preference and the Laterality of Cerebral SpeechCortex, 1975
- Early Descriptions of AphasiaArchives of Neurology, 1960
- EXPRESSIVE APHASIA AND AMUSIA FOLLOWING RIGHT FRONTAL LESION IN A RIGHT-HANDED MANBrain, 1959
- SPEECH AND HANDEDNESSThe Lancet, 1945
- ON "CROSSED" APHASIA AND THE FACTORS WHICH GO TO DETERMINE WHETHER THE "LEADING" OR "DRIVING" SPEECH-CENTRES SHALL BE LOCATED IN THE LEFT OR IN THE RIGHT HEMISPHERE OF THE BRAIN,: WITH NOTES OF A CASE OF " CROSSED " APHASIA (APHASIA WITH RIGHT-SIDED HEMIPLEGIA) IN A LEFT-HANDED MANThe Lancet, 1899
- A REMARKABLE CASE OF APHASIABrain, 1898
- ARREST OF DEVELOPMENT IN THE LEFT UPPER LIMB, IN ASSOCIATION WITH AN EXTREMELY SMALL RIGHT ASCENDING PARIETAL CONVOLUTION.Brain, 1880
- ON APHASIA, OR LOSS OF THE POWER OF SPEECH; WITH REMARKS ON OUR PRESENT KNOWLEDGE OF ITS PATHOLOGYThe Lancet, 1865