Lesion loci of impaired affective prosody: A systematic review of evidence from stroke.

Brain and Cognition
Alexandra Zezinka DurfeeArgye E Hillis

Abstract

Affective prosody, or the changes in rate, rhythm, pitch, and loudness that convey emotion, has long been implicated as a function of the right hemisphere (RH), yet there is a dearth of literature identifying the specific neural regions associated with its processing. The current systematic review aimed to evaluate the evidence on affective prosody localization in the RH. One hundred and ninety articles from 1970 to February 2020 investigating affective prosody comprehension and production in patients with focal brain damage were identified via database searches. Eleven articles met inclusion criteria, passed quality reviews, and were analyzed for affective prosody localization. Acute, subacute, and chronic lesions demonstrated similar profile characteristics. Localized right antero-superior (i.e., dorsal stream) regions contributed to affective prosody production impairments, whereas damage to more postero-lateral (i.e., ventral stream) regions resulted in affective prosody comprehension deficits. This review provides support that distinct RH regions are vital for affective prosody comprehension and production, aligning with literature reporting RH activation for affective prosody processing in healthy adults as well. The impa...Continue Reading

References

Jul 1, 1990·Brain and Cognition·A E Cancelliere, A Kertesz
Aug 1, 1991·Acta Neurologica Scandinavica·B BrådvikD H Ingvar
Jun 1, 1991·Brain : a Journal of Neurology·L X BlonderK M Heilman
May 1, 1987·Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry·P B Gorelick, E D Ross
Oct 1, 1987·Neurology·A KerteszT Carr
Oct 1, 1987·Brain and Cognition·C A Tompkins, C R Flowers
Nov 27, 1970·Science·N Geschwind
Mar 25, 1971·The New England Journal of Medicine·N Geschwind
Nov 1, 1983·Archives of Neurology·C P HughesM S Su
Jul 1, 1996·Archives of Neurology·M S GeorgeR M Post
May 16, 2000·Brain Research. Cognitive Brain Research·T W BuchananL Jäncke
Apr 1, 1997·Journal of the History of the Neurosciences·R E Graves
Apr 19, 2002·Brain : a Journal of Neurology·A E HillisE J Metter
May 22, 2003·Neuropsychologia·Rachel L C MitchellPeter W R Woodruff
Sep 16, 2003·Brain and Language·Sonja A KotzAngela D Friederici
Mar 24, 2004·Cognition·P Indefrey, W J M Levelt
Jan 25, 2005·Nature Neuroscience·Didier GrandjeanPatrik Vuilleumier
Jan 27, 2005·NeuroImage·D WildgruberH Ackermann
May 26, 2005·Brain and Language·Marc D Pell
Dec 3, 2005·Trends in Cognitive Sciences·Annett Schirmer, Sonja A Kotz
Mar 10, 2006·Cerebral Cortex·Virginie BeaucousinNathalie Tzourio-Mazoyer
Apr 14, 2007·Nature Reviews. Neuroscience·Gregory Hickok, David Poeppel
Jun 1, 2007·Brain and Language·Elliott D Ross, Marilee Monnot
Sep 16, 2010·Nature Reviews. Neurology·José G Merino, Steven Warach
Jan 4, 2012·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·Connie A Tompkins
Mar 24, 2012·Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology·Lee X BlonderRichard J Kryscio
Aug 13, 2013·Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience·Michel Belyk, Steven Brown
Apr 22, 2014·Metabolic Brain Disease·Venugopal Reddy Venna, Louise D McCullough

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Brain Injury & Trauma

brain injury after impact to the head is due to both immediate mechanical effects and delayed responses of neural tissues.

© 2021 Meta ULC. All rights reserved