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Cerebral specialization and verbal-motor...
Journal article

Cerebral specialization and verbal-motor integration in adults with and without Down syndrome

Abstract

Persons with Down syndrome (DS) tend to exhibit an atypical left ear-right hemisphere advantage (LEA) for the perception of speech sounds. In the present study, a recent adaptation of the dichotic listening procedure was employed to examine interhemispheric integration during the performance of a lateralized verbal-motor task. Although adults with DS (n = 13) demonstrated a right ear-left hemisphere advantage in the dichotic-motor task similar to their peers with (n = 14) and without undifferentiated developmental disabilities (n = 14), they showed an LEA in a free recall dichotic listening task. Based on a comparison of the laterality indices obtained from both dichotic listening procedures, it appears that the manifestation of lateral ear advantages in persons DS may dependent on the response requirements of the task.

Authors

Welsh TN; Elliott D; Simon DA

Journal

Brain and Language, Vol. 84, No. 2, pp. 152–169

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

February 1, 2003

DOI

10.1016/s0093-934x(02)00511-4

ISSN

0093-934X

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