2009
DOI: 10.3922/j.psns.2009.1.05
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Hemispheric specialization for communicative processing: Neuroimaging data on the role of the right hemisphere.

Abstract: Neuropsychology has traditionally studied language emphasizing the exclusive control of the left hemisphere of the brain over this process. With the growing development of this area in psychology and the availability of neuroimaging techniques, a critical analysis of the traditional concept of cerebral dominance for language and of the bases of the neurobiological representations of this cognitive function is crucial. In this context, this review aims to investigate evidence brought by neuroimaging studies on … Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 44 publications
(40 reference statements)
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“…Salah satu metode yang telah dikembangkan untuk memuji kompetensi keba-Dharmaperwira-Prins (2004: 40) me-hasaan hemisfer kanan adalah -Pemeriknyatakan bahwa penelitian mengenai ba-saan Komunikasi Hemisfer Kanan‖ (PKhasa dan hemisfer kanan meliputi aspek HK) (Dharmaperwira-Prins, 2004). Metoleksiko-semantik, makro-struktur, prag-de ini bertujuan untuk memeriksa ganggumatik, dan prosodi.…”
Section: Pendahuluanunclassified
“…Salah satu metode yang telah dikembangkan untuk memuji kompetensi keba-Dharmaperwira-Prins (2004: 40) me-hasaan hemisfer kanan adalah -Pemeriknyatakan bahwa penelitian mengenai ba-saan Komunikasi Hemisfer Kanan‖ (PKhasa dan hemisfer kanan meliputi aspek HK) (Dharmaperwira-Prins, 2004). Metoleksiko-semantik, makro-struktur, prag-de ini bertujuan untuk memeriksa ganggumatik, dan prosodi.…”
Section: Pendahuluanunclassified
“…In the traditional picture of language processing in the human brain, language is handled entirely in the left hemisphere, in a region centered on the classical areas identified by Broca and Wernicke in the 19th century. As shown by recent results from both neuroimaging and traditional lesion studies, this picture is a gross simplification, with language actually handled by much more complex networks spread out over a substantial fraction of the brain (Stowe et al 2005, Fisher & Marcus 2006, including a modest level of right-hemisphere involvement (Fonseca et al 2009). But the classical model does retain a kernel of truth, both in that the perisylvian region remains important, and in that language processing remains strongly asymmetric between the left and the right hemisphere, both quantitatively and qualitatively.…”
Section: Brainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Right hemisphere activity is commonly present in language tasks, but the left hemisphere is consistently more activated (see e.g., the numerous left-right image pairs in the review of Stowe et al 2005). There is also a division of labor between left and right, in that core aspects of language like syntax, phonology and basic lexical semantics are strongly leftlateralized, whereas the right hemisphere plays a larger role in prosody, pragmatics, discourse handling, ambiguity resolution, non-literal meaning, and other ancillary tasks (Fonseca et al 2009).…”
Section: Brainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among its neural correlates, classic areas of the left hemisphere continued to be the most associated with linguistic components and other cognitive components such as visual perception and praxis (Fonseca, Scherer, Oliveira, & Parente, 2009). New aspects of functional neuroanatomical relationships and individual differences such as age, education, bilinguism, etc.…”
Section: History Of Interdisciplinary Neuropsychologymentioning
confidence: 99%