1st Edition

Brain Stimulation and Language

Edited By Jenny Crinion Copyright 2013
    144 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    148 Pages
    by Routledge

    Focal brain stimulation to enhance human cognitive and language functions in both healthy individuals and those with aphasia is a relatively new and exciting area of research. In this special issue leading authors in the field present novel data and summarize the evidence related to the use of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and epidural cortical stimulation. These techniques are used not only for understanding normal brain-language functions but also language learning and recovery after brain damage. The first brain stimulation trials in aphasia rehabilitation are then investigated along with suggested directions for future research.

    Editorial -- Shocking speech /.Jenny Crinion -- Non-invasive brain stimulation and language processing in the healthy brain /Agnes Fidel -- Using TMS to study the role of the articulatory motor system in speech perception /Riikka Mottonen and Kate E. Watkins -- Posterior middle temporal gyrus is involved in verbal and non-verbalsemantic cognition: Evidence from rTMS /Paul Hoffman, Gorana Pobric, Mark Drakesmith, and Matthew A. Lambon Ralph -- Probing the involvement of the right hemisphere in language processing with online transcranial magnetic stimulation in healthy volunteers /Gesa Hartwigsen and Hartwig R. Siebner -- Finding the right words: Transcranial magnetic stimulation improves discourse productivity in non-fluent aphasia after stroke /Jared Medina, Catherine Norise, Olufunsho Faseyitan, H Branch Coslett, Peter E. Turkeltaub, and Roy H. Hamilton -- Can tDCS enhance treatment of aphasia after stroke? /Rachel Holland and Jenny Crinion -- Epidural cortical stimulation and aphasia therapy /Leora R. Cherney, Richard L. Harvey, Edna M. Babbitt, Rosalind Hurwitz, Rosalind C. Kaye, Jaime B. Lee, and Steven L. Small -- Call for Papers.

    Biography

    Jenny Crinion