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Why the Left Hemisphere Is Dominant for Speech Production: Connecting the Dots

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dc.contributor.author Sussman, Harvey Martin
dc.date.accessioned 2020-01-27T03:15:17Z
dc.date.available 2020-01-27T03:15:17Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12528/1481
dc.description.abstract Evidence from seemingly disparate areas of speech/language research is reviewed to form a unified theoretical account for why the left hemisphere is specialized for speech production. Research findings from studies investigating hemispheric lateralization of infant babbling, the primacy of the syllable in phonological structure, rhyming performance in split-brain patients, rhyming ability and phonetic categorization in children diagnosed with developmental apraxia of speech, rules governing exchange errors in spoonerisms, organizational principles of neocortical control of learned motor behaviors, and multi-electrode recordings of human neuronal responses to speech sounds are described and common threads highlighted. It is suggested that the emergence, in developmental neurogenesis, of a hard-wired, syllabically-organized, neural substrate representing the phonemic sound elements of one’s language, particularly the vocalic nucleus, is the crucial factor underlying the left hemisphere’s dominance for speech production. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject left hemisphere en
dc.subject biolinguistics en
dc.subject speech en
dc.title Why the Left Hemisphere Is Dominant for Speech Production: Connecting the Dots en
dc.type Article en


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