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Original Articles

Asymmetry in Mouth Opening During Different Speech Tasks

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Pages 179-189 | Published online: 24 Sep 2007

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Read on this site (5)

Chris Code, Michelle Lincoln & Rebekah Dredge. (2005) Asymmetries in mouth opening during word generation in male stuttering and non-stuttering participants. Laterality 10:5, pages 471-486.
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Andrea Cadalbert, Theodor Landis, Marianne Regard & RogerE. Graves. (1994) Singing with and without words: Hemispheric asymmetries in motor control. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 16:5, pages 664-670.
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StefanoF. Cappa & Giuseppe Vallar. (1992) The role of the left and right hemispheres in recovery from aphasia. Aphasiology 6:4, pages 359-372.
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Raymond Bruyer. (1990) The Cognitive Implications of Studies on Facial Asymmetry: A General Discussion. International Journal of Psychology 25:2, pages 229-236.
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Articles from other publishers (18)

René Westerhausen, Kristiina Kompus & Kenneth Hugdahl. (2014) Mapping hemispheric symmetries, relative asymmetries, and absolute asymmetries underlying the auditory laterality effect. NeuroImage 84, pages 962-970.
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Catherine Wallez, Jennifer Schaeffer, Adrien Meguerditchian, Jacques Vauclair, Steven J. Schapiro & William D. Hopkins. (2012) Contrast of hemispheric lateralization for oro-facial movements between learned attention-getting sounds and species-typical vocalizations in chimpanzees: Extension in a second colony. Brain and Language 123:1, pages 75-79.
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Emese Nagy. (2012) From symmetry to asymmetry? The development of smile. Cortex 48:8, pages 1064-1067.
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Catherine Wallez & Jacques Vauclair. (2011) Right hemisphere dominance for emotion processing in baboons. Brain and Cognition 75:2, pages 164-169.
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David PerrettDavid Perrett. 2010. In Your Face. In Your Face 72 96 .
Serena K. Yelle & Gina M. Grimshaw. (2009) Hemispheric Specialization for Linguistic Processing of Sung Speech. Perceptual and Motor Skills 108:1, pages 219-228.
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Elizabeth A. Reynolds Losin, Jamie L. Russell, Hani Freeman, Adrien Meguerditchian & William D. Hopkins. (2008) Left Hemisphere Specialization for Oro-Facial Movements of Learned Vocal Signals by Captive Chimpanzees. PLoS ONE 3:6, pages e2529.
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Michael E.R. Nicholls & Dara A. Searle. (2006) Asymmetries for the visual expression and perception of speech. Brain and Language 97:3, pages 322-331.
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Siobhan HolowkaLaura Ann Petitto. (2002) Left Hemisphere Cerebral Specialization for Babies While Babbling. Science 297:5586, pages 1515-1515.
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Hari S. Asthna, Braj Bhushan & Manas K. Mandal. 2002. Side Bias: A Neuropsychological Perspective. Side Bias: A Neuropsychological Perspective 289 312 .
Amy B. Wohlert & Vicki L. Hammen. (2000) Lip Muscle Activity Related to Speech Rate and Loudness. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 43:5, pages 1229-1239.
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David I Perrett, D.Michael Burt, Ian S Penton-Voak, Kieran J Lee, Duncan A Rowland & Rachel Edwards. (1999) Symmetry and Human Facial Attractiveness. Evolution and Human Behavior 20:5, pages 295-307.
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Markus Hausmann, Simone BEHRENDT-KÖRBITZ, Heike Kautz, Christina Lamm, Frauke Radelt & Onur GÜNTÜRKÜN. (1998) Sex differences in oral asymmetries during wordrepetition. Neuropsychologia 36:12, pages 1397-1402.
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Ellen Winner & Catya Von Karolyi. 1998. Acquired Aphasia. Acquired Aphasia 375 411 .
Chris Code. (2016) Asymmetries in Ear Movements and Eyebrow Raising in Men and Women and Right- and Left-Handers. Perceptual and Motor Skills 80:3_suppl, pages 1147-1154.
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Pierre Feyereisen. 1994. Le cerveau et la communication. Le cerveau et la communication 181 210 .
Marilyn Mendolia & Robert E. Kleck. (1991) Watching people talk about their emotions: Inferences in response to full-face vs. profile expressions. Motivation and Emotion 15:4, pages 229-242.
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Roger E. Graves, Esther H. Strauss & Juhn Wada. (1990) Mouth asymmetry during speech of epileptic patients who have undergone carotid amytal testing. Neuropsychologia 28:10, pages 1117-1121.
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