Literature DB >> 3567552

The neurological substrates for prosodic aspects of speech.

K D Emmorey.   

Abstract

The ability to comprehend and produce the stress contrast between noun compounds and noun phrases (e.g., greenhouse vs. green house) was examined for 8 nonfluent aphasics, 7 fluent aphasics, 7 right hemisphere damaged (RHD) patients, and 22 normal controls. The aphasics performed worse than normal controls on the comprehension task, and the RHD group performed as well as normals. The ability to produce stress contrasts was tested with a sentence-reading task; acoustic measurements revealed that no nonfluent aphasic used pitch to distinguish noun compounds from phrases, but two used duration. All but one of the RHD patients and all but one of the normals produced pitch and/or duration cues. These results suggest that linguistic prosody is processed by the left hemisphere and that with brain damage the ability to produce pitch and duration cues may be dissociated at the lexical level.

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Mesh:

Year:  1987        PMID: 3567552     DOI: 10.1016/0093-934x(87)90105-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Lang        ISSN: 0093-934X            Impact factor:   2.381


  8 in total

1.  FMRI reveals brain regions mediating slow prosodic modulations in spoken sentences.

Authors:  Martin Meyer; Kai Alter; Angela D Friederici; Gabriele Lohmann; D Yves von Cramon
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 5.038

2.  Prosodic comprehension and expression in schizophrenia.

Authors:  D Murphy; J Cutting
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  1990-09       Impact factor: 10.154

3.  A possible functional localizer for identifying brain regions sensitive to sentence-level prosody.

Authors:  Evelina Fedorenko; Po-Jang Hsieh; Zuzanna Balewski
Journal:  Lang Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 2.331

4.  A cross-language study of perception of lexical stress in English.

Authors:  Vickie Y Yu; Jean E Andruski
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2010-08

5.  Affective-prosodic deficits in schizophrenia: comparison to patients with brain damage and relation to schizophrenic symptoms [corrected].

Authors:  E D Ross; D M Orbelo; J Cartwright; S Hansel; M Burgard; J A Testa; R Buck
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 10.154

6.  The role of fundamental frequency in signaling linguistic stress and affect: evidence for a dissociation.

Authors:  G W McRoberts; M Studdert-Kennedy; D P Shankweiler
Journal:  Percept Psychophys       Date:  1995-02

7.  The DIVA model: A neural theory of speech acquisition and production.

Authors:  Jason A Tourville; Frank H Guenther
Journal:  Lang Cogn Process       Date:  2011-01-01

8.  Human neuropsychology and the concept of culture.

Authors:  L X Blonder
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  1991-06
  8 in total

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