| Literature DB >> 31335278 |
James R Bateman1, Christopher M Filley2,3, Elliott D Ross4,5, Brianne M Bettcher6, H Isabel Hubbard7, Miranda Babiak8, Peter S Pressman9.
Abstract
Affective prosody and facial expression are essential components of human communication. Aprosodic syndromes are associated with focal right cerebral lesions that impair the affective-prosodic aspects of language, but are rarely identified because affective prosody is not routinely assessed by clinicians. Inability to produce emotional faces (affective prosoplegia) is a related and important aspect of affective communication has overlapping neuroanatomic substrates with affective prosody. We describe a patient with progressive aprosodia and prosoplegia who had right greater than left perisylvian and temporal atrophy with an anterior predominance. We discuss the importance of assessing affective prosody and facial expression to arrive at an accurate clinical diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Aprosodia; aphasia; neurodegeneration; prosody
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31335278 PMCID: PMC7510567 DOI: 10.1080/13554794.2019.1646291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocase ISSN: 1355-4794 Impact factor: 0.881