An analysis of the concurrent incidence of aphasia and spatial disorder in 270 patients with unilateral brain damage suggests that the two functions are statistically independent. These data can also be used to estimate the distribution of left, right, and bilateral representation of linguistic and spatial functions in the population. In right-handers, sex affects the pattern of cerebral asymmetries, while the familial history of sinistrality has a stronger effect on the pattern of cerebral asymmetries in left-handers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObservations of acquired aphasia in a more numerous series of children with cortical lesions modifies somewhat the conclusions of an earlier study. Aphasic syndromes in these children seem to result almost exclusively from left hemispheric lesions in right-handers. Aphasia is more frequent, at least among the youngest children, than in adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Neurol (Paris)
November 1981