Bibliographic Information

Cerebral control of speech and limb movements

edited by Geoffrey R. Hammond

(Advances in psychology, 70)

North-Holland , Distributors for the U.S. and Canada, Elsevier Science Pub. Co., 1990

Available at  / 50 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Discussed in this book is the association between speech and movements, especially those of the preferred hand. Both are skilled motor activities that appear to depend upon a similar neural organization that is available in the left hemisphere of the brain. The nature of this association of the cerebral control of speech and skilled manual performance is discussed in four sections: 1. Motor control and speech examines speech as a motor activity2. Language and gesture examines the correspondence between spoken language and manual gesture3. Motor performance and aphasia examines the motor impairments associated with aphasias4. Interactions of speech and manual performance examines the interactions that occur between concurrent verbal and manual activities

Table of Contents

Control of Limb and Speech Movements Characteristics of Speech as a Motor Control System Control of Human Jaw and Multi-joint Arm Movements Manual Performance Asymmetries The Development of Hemispheric and Manual Specialization Disorders of Motor Function Following Cortical Lesions: Review and Theoretical Considerations Complex Movement Behavior: Toward Understanding Cortical and Subcortical Interactions in Regulating Control Processes Language and Gesture Speech and Gesture Gestures and Speech: Evidence from Aphasia The Concomitance of Speech and Manual Gesture in Aphasic Subjects Language and Motor Disorders in Deaf Signers Relations Between Verbal and Gestural Explanations Motor Performance and Aphasia Motoric Characteristics of Adult Aphasic and Apraxic Speakers Hemispheric Control of Articulatory Speech Output in Aphasia The Relationship between Pantomime Expression and Recognition in Aphasia: The Search for Causes The Dissociation of Aphasia from Apraxia of Speech, Ideomotor Limb, and Buccofacial Apraxia Evidence for Common Expressions of Apraxia The Assessment of Limb Apraxia: The Limb Apraxia Test Interactions of Speech and Manual Performance Interactions of Vocal and Manual Movements Comparative Investigations of Speech and Other Neuromotor Systems Development of Sensorimotor Capacities Relevant to Speech and Concurrent Task Performance Is Time Sharing Asymmetry a Valid Indicator of Speech Lateralization? Evidence for Left Handers Asymmetric Manual Interference as an Indicator of Lateralized Brain Function Temporal Constraints on Concurrent Task Performance

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  • Advances in psychology

    North-Holland , Sole distributors for the U.S.A. and Canada, Elsevier North-Holland

    Available at 1 libraries

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