Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
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Diffusion tensor imaging studies on arcuate fasciculus in stroke patients: a reviewMusic in Research and Rehabilitation of Disorders of Consciousness: Psychological and Neurophysiological FoundationsGlioma surgery in eloquent areas: can we preserve cognition?Stroke Connectome and Its Implications for Cognitive and Behavioral Sequela of StrokeNon-Invasive Brain Stimulation Enhances the Effects of Melodic Intonation TherapyBrain connectivity reflects human aesthetic responses to music.White Matter Integrity and Treatment-Based Change in Speech Performance in Minimally Verbal Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.Neurobiological, cognitive, and emotional mechanisms in melodic intonation therapyIntensive therapy induces contralateral white matter changes in chronic stroke patients with Broca's aphasia.When right is all that is left: plasticity of right-hemisphere tracts in a young aphasic patient.Auditory-Motor Mapping Training: Comparing the Effects of a Novel Speech Treatment to a Control Treatment for Minimally Verbal Children with Autism.Success of Anomia Treatment in Aphasia Is Associated With Preserved Architecture of Global and Left Temporal Lobe Structural Networks.Investigating the contribution of ventral-lexical and dorsal-sublexical pathways during reading in bilingualsThe superior longitudinal fasciculus in typically developing children and adolescents: diffusion tensor imaging and neuropsychological correlates.Why use a connectivity-based approach to study stroke and recovery of function?Lesion localization of global aphasia without hemiparesis by overlapping of the brain magnetic resonance imagesRelation between aphasia and arcuate fasciculus in chronic stroke patientsStudy design for the fostering eating after stroke with transcranial direct current stimulation trial: a randomized controlled intervention for improving Dysphagia after acute ischemic stroke.The use of non-invasive brain stimulation techniques to facilitate recovery from post-stroke aphasiaFailure to Identify the Left Arcuate Fasciculus at Diffusion Tractography Is a Specific Marker of Language Dysfunction in Pediatric Patients with PolymicrogyriaContributions of bilateral white matter to chronic aphasia symptoms as assessed by diffusion tensor MRIDistinguishing the effect of lesion load from tract disconnection in the arcuate and uncinate fasciculi.Brodmann's Area Template Based Region of Interest Setting and Probabilistic Pathway Map Generation in Diffusion Tensor Tractography: Application to the Arcuate Fasciculus Fiber Tract in the Human Brain.Right hemisphere structures predict poststroke speech fluency.The Impact of Acute Phase Domain-Specific Cognitive Function on Post-stroke Functional Recovery.Predicting outcome and recovery after stroke with lesions extracted from MRI imagesNeural substrate responsible for crossed aphasia.Predicting speech fluency and naming abilities in aphasic patients.Dissociated repetition deficits in aphasia can reflect flexible interactions between left dorsal and ventral streams and gender-dimorphic architecture of the right dorsal stream.Damage to white matter bottlenecks contributes to language impairments after left hemispheric stroke.Beyond the arcuate fasciculus: consensus and controversy in the connectional anatomy of language.Right hemisphere structural adaptation and changing language skills years after left hemisphere stroke.Arcuate fasciculus asymmetry has a hand in language function but not handedness.White matter pathway supporting phonological encoding in speech production: a multi-modal imaging study of brain damage patients.Changes in white matter connectivity following therapy for anomia post stroke.Biomarkers of stroke recovery: Consensus-based core recommendations from the Stroke Recovery and Rehabilitation Roundtable.Brain regions important for recovery after severe post-stroke upper limb paresisSpontaneous and Therapeutic-Induced Mechanisms of Functional Recovery After Stroke.Coherent neural oscillations predict future motor and language improvement after stroke.Investigating structure and function in the healthy human brain: validity of acute versus chronic lesion-symptom mapping.
P2860
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P2860
Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
description
2011 nî lūn-bûn
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2011 թուականի Յունիսին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
2011 թվականի հունիսին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
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2011年の論文
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2011年学术文章
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2011年学术文章
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2011年学术文章
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2011年学术文章
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2011年学术文章
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2011年學術文章
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name
Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
@ast
Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
@en
type
label
Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
@ast
Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
@en
prefLabel
Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
@ast
Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
@en
P2860
P50
P1433
P1476
Impairment of speech production predicted by lesion load of the left arcuate fasciculus.
@en
P2093
Catherine Y Wan
P2860
P304
P356
10.1161/STROKEAHA.110.606103
P407
P577
2011-06-30T00:00:00Z