Marcotte A C, Morere D A
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University Program in Medicine, RI.
Brain Lang. 1990 Jul;39(1):134-52. doi: 10.1016/0093-934x(90)90008-5.
Cerebral lateralization for speech in right-handed normal hearing and deaf adolescents was assessed using the dual-task paradigm. Subjects with normal hearing and deafness acquired after 3 years of age displayed left hemispheric dominance for speech production, whereas both congenitally deaf and those with an early acquired deafness (onset 6-36 months) showed atypical, anomalous cerebral representation. These results suggest the presence of a developmental critical period for cerebral lateralization during which exposure to adequate environmental stimulation may be needed to activate left hemispheric dominance for speech.