All Relations between language understanding and right cerebral hemisphere

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Anna Seydell-Greenwald, Catherine E Chambers, Katrina Ferrara, Elissa L Newpor. What you say versus how you say it: Comparing sentence comprehension and emotional prosody processing using fMRI. NeuroImage. vol 209. 2021-02-18. PMID:31899288. while language processing is often described as lateralized to the left hemisphere (lh), the processing of emotion carried by vocal intonation is typically attributed to the right hemisphere (rh) and more specifically, to areas mirroring the lh language areas. 2021-02-18 2023-08-13 Not clear
Susan M Bowyer, Andrew Zillgitt, Margaret Greenwald, Renee Lajiness-O'Neil. Language Mapping With Magnetoencephalography: An Update on the Current State of Clinical Research and Practice With Considerations for Clinical Practice Guidelines. Journal of clinical neurophysiology : official publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society. vol 37. issue 6. 2021-02-02. PMID:33165228. over time, the chronic nature of epileptic activity, or changes from a tumor or stroke, can result in a shift of language processing area from the left to the right hemisphere, or re-routing of language pathways from traditional to non-traditional areas within the dominant left hemisphere. 2021-02-02 2023-08-13 Not clear
Jeffrey P Johnson, Erin L Meier, Yue Pan, Swathi Kira. Treatment-related changes in neural activation vary according to treatment response and extent of spared tissue in patients with chronic aphasia. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 121. 2020-11-24. PMID:31627014. neuroimaging studies of aphasia recovery have linked treatment-related improvements in language processing to changes in functional brain activation in left hemisphere language regions and their right hemisphere homologues. 2020-11-24 2023-08-13 Not clear
Jeffrey P Johnson, Erin L Meier, Yue Pan, Swathi Kira. Treatment-related changes in neural activation vary according to treatment response and extent of spared tissue in patients with chronic aphasia. Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior. vol 121. 2020-11-24. PMID:31627014. these results suggest that the predominant effect of beneficial naming treatment was an upregulation of traditional language areas and their right hemisphere homologues and, in particular, regions associated with phonological and semantic/executive semantic processing, as well as broader domain general functions. 2020-11-24 2023-08-13 Not clear
Ronald Chu, Steve Joordens, Jed A Meltze. Interhemispheric transfer of semantic information facilitates bilateral word recognition. Journal of experimental psychology. General. vol 149. issue 5. 2020-10-02. PMID:31789570. language comprehension is left-lateralized but with variable contributions from the right hemisphere. 2020-10-02 2023-08-13 Not clear
Clinton L Johns, Kristen M Tooley, Matthew J Traxle. Discourse Impairments Following Right Hemisphere Brain Damage: A Critical Review. Language and linguistics compass. vol 2. issue 6. 2020-10-01. PMID:26085839. while the exact role that the right hemisphere plays in language processing, and the exact way that the two cerebral hemispheres coordinate their linguistic processes are still open to debate, our review suggests that the right hemisphere plays a critical role in managing inferred or implied information by maintaining relevant information and/or suppressing irrelevant information. 2020-10-01 2023-08-13 Not clear
Michele T Diaz, Anna Eppe. Factors Influencing Right Hemisphere Engagement During Metaphor Comprehension. Frontiers in psychology. vol 9. 2020-09-29. PMID:29643825. although the left hemisphere is critical for language, clinical, behavioral, and neuroimaging research suggest that the right hemisphere also contributes to language comprehension. 2020-09-29 2023-08-13 Not clear
Marcelo L Berthier, Guadalupe Dávila, María José Torres-Prioris, Ignacio Moreno-Torres, Jordi Clarimón, Oriol Dols-Icardo, María J Postigo, Victoria Fernández, Lisa Edelkraut, Lorena Moreno-Campos, Diana Molina-Sánchez, Paloma Solo de Zaldivar, Diana López-Barros. Developmental Dynamic Dysphasia: Are Bilateral Brain Abnormalities a Signature of Inefficient Neural Plasticity? Frontiers in human neuroscience. vol 14. 2020-09-28. PMID:32265672. dichotic listening showed right hemisphere dominance for language, and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fmri) additionally revealed dissociated hemispheric language representation with right frontal activation for phonology and bilateral dominance for semantic processing. 2020-09-28 2023-08-13 human
Philipp Kellmeyer, Magnus-Sebastian Vry, Tonio Bal. A transcallosal fibre system between homotopic inferior frontal regions supports complex linguistic processing. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 50. issue 10. 2020-08-31. PMID:31209927. inferior frontal regions in the left and right hemisphere support different aspects of language processing. 2020-08-31 2023-08-13 human
Sam van Bijnen, Salme Kärkkäinen, Päivi Helenius, Tiina Parviaine. Left hemisphere enhancement of auditory activation in language impaired children. Scientific reports. vol 9. issue 1. 2020-08-18. PMID:31235763. furthermore, left but not right hemisphere n250m responses correlated positively with performance on a phonological processing task in the sli group exclusively, possibly signifying a compensatory mechanism for delayed maturation of language processing. 2020-08-18 2023-08-13 Not clear
Erin L Meier, Jeffrey P Johnson, Yue Pan, Swathi Kira. A lesion and connectivity-based hierarchical model of chronic aphasia recovery dissociates patients and healthy controls. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 23. 2020-08-06. PMID:31491828. traditional models of left hemisphere stroke recovery propose that reactivation of remaining ipsilesional tissue is optimal for language processing whereas reliance on contralesional right hemisphere homologues is less beneficial or possibly maladaptive in the chronic recovery stage. 2020-08-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Jinping Xu, Hanqing Lyu, Tian Li, Ziyun Xu, Xianjun Fu, Fucang Jia, Jiaojian Wang, Qingmao H. Delineating functional segregations of the human middle temporal gyrus with resting-state functional connectivity and coactivation patterns. Human brain mapping. vol 40. issue 18. 2020-04-24. PMID:31423713. the specific connectivity analysis and functional characterization indicated that the bilateral most anterior subregions mainly participated in social cognition and semantic processing; the ventral middle subregions were involved in social cognition in left hemisphere and auditory processing in right hemisphere; the bilateral ventro-posterior subregions participated in action observation, whereas the left subregion was also involved in semantic processing; both of the dorsal subregions in superior temporal sulcus were involved in language, social cognition, and auditory processing. 2020-04-24 2023-08-13 human
Doriana Chialant, Alfonso Caramazz. PERCEPTUA.ND LEXICA.ACTORS IN A CAS.F LETTER-BY-LETTER READING. Cognitive neuropsychology. vol 15. issue 1-2. 2019-11-20. PMID:28657521. in mj's case, the deficit reflects the degraded transfer of information from a normal visual processing system in the right hemisphere to a normal language processing system in the left hemisphere. 2019-11-20 2023-08-13 Not clear
Dimitrios Kasselimis, Constantin Potagas, Panagiotis Simos, Ioannis Evdokimidis, Harry Whitake. Mixed language dominance: insights from a case of unexpected fluent aphasia with semantic jargon resulting from massive left perisylvian lesion. Neurocase. vol 24. issue 1. 2019-09-09. PMID:29277135. he exhibited strikingly unexpected aphasia with semantic jargon and prominent comprehension deficits, suggesting that this is a case of mixed dominance: the right hemisphere likely controls motor speech and basic syntactic skills, while the severely damaged left hemisphere controls semantic processing, predictably severely impaired. 2019-09-09 2023-08-13 Not clear
Matthew Walton, Deborah Dewey, Catherine Lebe. Brain white matter structure and language ability in preschool-aged children. Brain and language. vol 176. 2019-01-21. PMID:29132048. our findings in right hemisphere areas that are not as commonly found in adult studies suggest that young children rely on a widespread network for language processing that becomes more specialized with age. 2019-01-21 2023-08-13 Not clear
A Kielar, T Deschamps, R Jokel, J A Meltze. Abnormal language-related oscillatory responses in primary progressive aphasia. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 18. 2019-01-10. PMID:29845004. the recruitment of right hemisphere temporo-parietal areas (also found in controls) was correlated with preserved semantic processing abilities, indicating that preserved neural activity in these regions was able to support successful semantic processing. 2019-01-10 2023-08-13 human
Jie Zhuang, David J Madden, Xuan Duong-Fernandez, Nan-Kuei Chen, Scott W Cousins, Guy G Potter, Michele T Diaz, Heather E Whitso. Language processing in age-related macular degeneration associated with unique functional connectivity signatures in the right hemisphere. Neurobiology of aging. vol 63. 2018-09-26. PMID:29223681. language processing in age-related macular degeneration associated with unique functional connectivity signatures in the right hemisphere. 2018-09-26 2023-08-13 Not clear
Sandra Virtue, Michael Schutzenhofer, Blaine Tomkin. Hemispheric processing of predictive inferences during reading: The influence of negatively emotional valenced stimuli. Laterality. vol 22. issue 4. 2017-08-25. PMID:27530829. although a left hemisphere advantage is usually evident during language processing, the right hemisphere is highly involved during the processing of weakly constrained inferences. 2017-08-25 2023-08-13 human
Jie Yang, Ping Li, Xiaoping Fang, Hua Shu, Youyi Liu, Lang Che. Hemispheric involvement in the processing of Chinese idioms: An fMRI study. Neuropsychologia. vol 87. 2017-04-26. PMID:27143223. although the left hemisphere is believed to handle major language functions, the role of the right hemisphere in language comprehension remains controversial. 2017-04-26 2023-08-13 Not clear
Ross Metusalem, Marta Kutas, Thomas P Urbach, Jeffrey L Elma. Hemispheric asymmetry in event knowledge activation during incremental language comprehension: A visual half-field ERP study. Neuropsychologia. vol 84. 2016-12-16. PMID:26878980. this result suggests that right hemisphere processes are critical to the activation of event knowledge elements that violate the linguistic context, and in doing so informs existing theories of hemispheric asymmetries in semantic processing during language comprehension. 2016-12-16 2023-08-13 human