Publication | Open Access
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Reveals Atypical Language Organization in Children Following Perinatal Left Middle Cerebral Artery Stroke
69
Citations
12
References
2006
Year
Brain StructureMedicineNeurolinguisticsChild LanguageAtypical Language DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionPsycholinguisticsNeuroimagingVerb GenerationNeurologyNeuroscienceVerb Generation TaskLanguage OrganizationSpeech PerceptionLanguage StudiesLanguage NetworkBrain LesionLanguage Disorder
We used verb generation and story listening tasks during fMRI to study language organization in children (7, 9 and 12 years old) with perinatal left MCA infarctions. Healthy, age-matched comparison children (n = 39) showed activation in left Broca's area during the verb generation task; in contrast, stroke subjects showed activation either bilaterally or in the right hemisphere homologue during both tasks. In Wernicke's area, comparison subjects showed left lateralization (verb generation) and bilateral activation (L > R) (story listening). Stroke subjects instead showed bilateral or right lateralization (verb generation) and bilateral activation (R > L) (story listening). Language is distributed atypically in children with perinatal left hemisphere stroke.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1