Literature DB >> 12499411

Cerebral organization in a right-handed trilingual patient with right-hemisphere speech: a positron emission tomography study.

Denise Klein1, Brenda Milner, Robert J Zatorre, Regina Visca, André Olivier.   

Abstract

Using the method of positron emission tomography, combined with word-generation tasks, we had the opportunity to examine the cerebral representation of multiple languages in the brain in a right-handed patient, RA, with known right-hemisphere speech representation as determined by intracarotid sodium amobarbital testing. Similar patterns of cerebral blood flow were observed across all three languages (French, Spanish and English), when synonym generation was compared with a silent resting baseline. In particular, several regions in the right inferior frontal cortex were activated. These foci are in locations corresponding to those observed in the left hemisphere in normal right-handed volunteers with presumed left-hemisphere dominance, and in patients known to be left-hemisphere dominant for speech. The lack of anatomical separation of the three languages within the same individual, who acquired two languages early and one language later in life, suggests that at least at this single-word level of analysis, age of acquisition was not a significant factor in the determining of functional organization in the brain.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12499411     DOI: 10.1076/neur.8.4.369.16185

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurocase        ISSN: 1355-4794            Impact factor:   0.881


  3 in total

Review 1.  Third International Congress on Epilepsy, Brain and Mind: Part 1.

Authors:  Amos D Korczyn; Steven C Schachter; Jana Amlerova; Meir Bialer; Walter van Emde Boas; Milan Brázdil; Eylert Brodtkorb; Jerome Engel; Jean Gotman; Vladmir Komárek; Ilo E Leppik; Petr Marusic; Stefano Meletti; Birgitta Metternich; Chris J A Moulin; Nils Muhlert; Marco Mula; Karl O Nakken; Fabienne Picard; Andreas Schulze-Bonhage; William Theodore; Peter Wolf; Adam Zeman; Ivan Rektor
Journal:  Epilepsy Behav       Date:  2015-08-11       Impact factor: 2.937

Review 2.  Intraoperative Brain Mapping in Multilingual Patients: What Do We Know and Where Are We Going?

Authors:  Jesús Martín-Fernández; Andreu Gabarrós; Alejandro Fernandez-Coello
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2022-04-27

Review 3.  General principles governing the amount of neuroanatomical overlap between languages in bilinguals.

Authors:  Monika M Połczyńska; Susan Y Bookheimer
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2021-08-13       Impact factor: 8.989

  3 in total

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