Incidence of Aphasia in Left-Handers: A Test of Some Hypothetical Models of Cerebral Speech Organization11This research was supported, in part, by funds from the National Institute of Health (NS08208).
- 1 January 1980
- book chapter
- Published by Elsevier
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Visuospatial competency, handedness, and cerebral dominanceBrain and Language, 1978
- Handedness, speech lateralization and abilityNeuropsychologia, 1973
- Cerebral Dominance in Left-Handed SubjectsCortex, 1971
- Possible Basis for the Evolution of Lateral Specialization of the Human BrainNature, 1969
- Comparison of verbal behavior in right-handed and non right-handed patients with anatomically verified lesion of one hemisphereCortex, 1969
- Statistical Evidence of Neuropsychological Syndromes in Left-Handed and Ambidextrous PatientsCortex, 1966
- LANGUAGE LATERALITY IN LEFT-HANDED APHASICSBrain, 1954
- DYSPHASIA IN LEFT-HANDED PATIENTS WITH UNILATERAL BRAIN LESIONSJournal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1952
- 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
- ON APHASIA, WITH LEFT HEMIPLEGIA.The Lancet, 1880