Foundas A L, Macauley B L, Raymer A M, Maher L M, Heilman K M, Rothi L J
Department of Psychiatry and Neurology, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA 70112-2632, USA.
Brain Cogn. 1995 Nov;29(2):204-13. doi: 10.1006/brcg.1995.1277.
Limb preference during conversational gestures may be a reflection of functional hemispheric asymmetries. In right-handers, speech and praxis are usually mediated by the left hemisphere and in conversation, right-handers gesture more with their right than left hand. However, patients with left hemisphere brain damage, who are aphasic and apraxic but not hemiplegic, may use their right hemisphere to compensate for their left. Therefore, we investigated spontaneous lateralized gesture production during conversation in a group of left hemisphere-damaged stroke patients, who were aphasic and apraxic but not hemiparetic, and compared their performance to a group of matched controls. Whereas the control group had a strong right-hand preference, the nonparetic but apraxic and aphasic stroke patients were as likely to produce gestures with the right, left, or both hands.
对话手势中的肢体偏好可能反映了大脑半球的功能不对称。在右利手人群中,言语和动作通常由左半球介导,在对话中,右利手者用右手比左手做更多手势。然而,患有左半球脑损伤的患者,他们失语且失用但非偏瘫,可能会利用右半球来代偿左半球。因此,我们研究了一组失语且失用但非偏瘫的左半球损伤中风患者在对话中自发的偏侧化手势产生情况,并将他们的表现与一组匹配的对照组进行比较。对照组有强烈的右手偏好,而未偏瘫但失用且失语的中风患者用右手、左手或双手做出手势的可能性相同。