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Research Article

Using prosody to resolve temporary syntactic ambiguities in speech production: acoustic data on brain-damaged speakers

Pages 441-456 | Published online: 09 Jul 2009

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (3)

Lorraine Baqué. (2020) How do persons with apraxia of speech deal with morphological stress in Spanish? A preliminary study. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 34:1-2, pages 131-168.
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Diana Van Lancker Sidtis, Daniel Kempler, Catherine Jackson & E. Jeffrey Metter. (2010) Prosodic changes in aphasic speech: timing. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 24:2, pages 155-167.
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Judy P. Walker, Lydia Joseph & Jeffrey Goodman. (2009) The production of linguistic prosody in subjects with aphasia. Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 23:7, pages 529-549.
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Articles from other publishers (13)

Carola de Beer, Isabell Wartenburger, Clara Huttenlauch & Sandra Hanne. (2023) A systematic review on production and comprehension of linguistic prosody in people with acquired language and communication disorders resulting from unilateral brain lesions. Journal of Communication Disorders 101, pages 106298.
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Amedeo De Dominicis. 2023. Language Electrified. Language Electrified 647 668 .
Carola de Beer, Andrea Hofmann, Frank Regenbrecht, Clara Huttenlauch, Isabell Wartenburger, Hellmuth Obrig & Sandra Hanne. (2022) Production and Comprehension of Prosodic Boundary Marking in Persons With Unilateral Brain Lesions. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 65:12, pages 4774-4796.
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Melissa D. Stockbridge, Shannon M. Sheppard, Lynsey M. Keator, Laura L. Murray & Margaret Lehman Blake. (2021) Aprosodia Subsequent to Right Hemisphere Brain Damage: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society 28:7, pages 709-735.
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Seung-yun Yang. (2022) Acoustic cues associated with Korean sarcastic utterances produced by right- and left-hemisphere damaged individuals. Journal of Communication Disorders 98, pages 106229.
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Ethan Weed & Riccardo Fusaroli. (2020) Acoustic Measures of Prosody in Right-Hemisphere Damage: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 63:6, pages 1762-1775.
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Seung-yun Yang & Diana Van Lancker Sidtis. (2016) Production of Korean Idiomatic Utterances Following Left- and Right-Hemisphere Damage: Acoustic Studies. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 59:2, pages 267-280.
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Derek K Tracy, David K Ho, Owen O'Daly, Panayiota Michalopoulou, Lisa C Lloyd, Eleanor Dimond, Kazunori Matsumoto & Sukhwinder S Shergill. (2011) It's not what you say but the way that you say it: an fMRI study of differential lexical and non-lexical prosodic pitch processing. BMC Neuroscience 12:1.
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Nathalie Bélanger, Shari R. Baum & Debra Titone. (2009) Use of prosodic cues in the production of idiomatic and literal sentences by individuals with right- and left-hemisphere damage. Brain and Language 110:1, pages 38-42.
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Amee P. Shah, Shari R. Baum & Veena D. Dwivedi. (2006) Neural substrates of linguistic prosody: Evidence from syntactic disambiguation in the productions of brain-damaged patients. Brain and Language 96:1, pages 78-89.
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Annett Schirmer. (2004) Timing speech: a review of lesion and neuroimaging findings. Cognitive Brain Research 21:2, pages 269-287.
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Shari R. Baum & Veena D. Dwivedi. (2003) Sensitivity to prosodic structure in left- and right-hemisphere-damaged individuals. Brain and Language 87:2, pages 278-289.
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Jack Gandour & Shari R. Baum. (2001) Production of Stress Retraction by Left- and Right-Hemisphere-Damaged Patients. Brain and Language 79:3, pages 482-494.
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