Literature DB >> 12367514

Word retrieval learning modulates right frontal cortex in patients with left frontal damage.

Valeria Blasi1, Alexis C Young, Aaron P Tansy, Steven E Petersen, Abraham Z Snyder, Maurizio Corbetta.   

Abstract

Previous studies have suggested that recovery or compensation of language function after a lesion in the left hemisphere may depend on mechanisms in the right hemisphere. However, a direct relationship between performance and right hemisphere activity has not been established. Here, we show that patients with left frontal lesions and partially recovered aphasia learn, at a normal rate, a novel word retrieval task that requires the damaged cortex. Verbal learning is accompanied by specific response decrements in right frontal and right occipital cortex, strongly supporting the compensatory role of the right hemisphere. Furthermore, responses in left occipital cortex are abnormal and not modulated by practice. These findings indicate that frontal cortex is a source of top-down signals during learning.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12367514     DOI: 10.1016/s0896-6273(02)00936-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuron        ISSN: 0896-6273            Impact factor:   17.173


  60 in total

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7.  A functional MRI study of the relationship between naming treatment outcomes and resting state functional connectivity in post-stroke aphasia.

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Review 8.  Neuroimaging in stroke recovery: a position paper from the First International Workshop on Neuroimaging and Stroke Recovery.

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9.  Neuroimaging and recovery of language in aphasia.

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10.  Reorganization of syntactic processing following left-hemisphere brain damage: does right-hemisphere activity preserve function?

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