Speech & Language References

1.Albert, M.L., Sparks, R.W. & Helm, N.A. (1973) Melodic Intonation Therapy for  Aphasia. Archives of Neurology 29: 130–131

2.Belin, P., Van Eeckhout, P., Zilbovicius, M., Remy, P., Francois, C., Guillaume, S., Chain, F., Rancurel, G. & Samson, Y. (1996) Recovery from Nonfluent Aphasia after Melodic Intonation Therapy: A PET study. Neurology 47: 1504-1511.

3.Brown, S., Martinez, M.J., & Parsons, L. (2006) Music and Language side by side in the brain: A PET study of the generation of melodies and sentences. European Journal of Neuroscience. 23: 2791-2803.

4.Dickey, L., Kagan, A., Lindsay, M. P., Fang, J., Rowland, A., & Black, S. (2010).Incidence and profile of inpatient stroke-induced aphasia in Ontario, Canada. Archives of  Physical Medicine and Rehabiiitation, 91(2), 196-202.

5.Ethofer, T., Anders, S., Erb M, Herbert, C., Wiethoff, S., Kissler, J., Grodd, W. & Wildgruber, D. (2006) Cerebral pathways in processing of affectiveprosody: a dynamic causal modeling study. Neuroimage. 30:580–587.

6.Glasser, M.F. & Rilling, J.K. (2008) DTI Tractography of the Human Brain’s LanguagePathways. Cerebral Cortex 18:2471-2482.

7.Greener, J., Enderby, P., Whurr, R. & Grant, A. (1998). Treatment for aphasia following stroke: evidence for effectiveness. International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 33 Supplement, 158-161.

8.Heiss, W.-D., Kessler, J., Thiel, A., Ghaemi, M. & Karbe, H. (1999) Differential Capacity of Left and Right Hemispheric Areas for Compensation of Poststroke Aphasia. Annals of Neurology  45 (4):430-438.

9.Heiss, W.-D. & Thiel, A. (2006)  A Proposed Regional Hierarchy in Recovery of Post-Stroke Aphasia.  Brain and Language. 98: 118-123.

10.Hillis, A.E. (2010) The Standard for Poststroke Aphasia Recovery. Stroke. 41: 1316-1317.

11.Jeffries, K.J., Fritz, J.B. & Braun, A.R. (2003) Words in Melody: an H2O PET Study of Brain Activation During Singing and Speaking. NeuroReport.  14(5): 749-754.

12.Kelly, H., Brady, M.C. & Enderby, P. (2010) Speech and Language Therapy for Aphasia following Stroke (Review). The Cochrane Library 7: 1-170.

13.Lazar, R.M., Minzer, B., Antoniello, D., Festa, J.R., Krakauer, J.W. & Marshall, R.S. (2010) Improvement in Aphasia Scores After Stroke Is Well Predicted by Initial Severity Stroke July: 1485-1488

14.Marina, A., Pasqualetti, P. & Carlomagno, S. (2007) Patterns of Language Improvement in Adults with Non-Fluent Aphasia after Specific Therapies. Aphasiology. 21(2): 164-186.

15.Meyer, M., Alter, K., Friederici, A.D., Lohmann, G. & von Cramon, D.Y. (2002) fMRI reveals brain regions mediating slow prosodic modulations in spoken sentences. Human  Brain Mapping. 17:73–88.

16.Mitchell, R.L., Elliott, R., Barry, M., Cruttenden, A. & Woodruff, P.W. (2003) The neural response to emotional prosody, as revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging. Neuropsychologia. 41:1410-1421.

17.National Stroke Association Website.  Retrieved May 13, 2010 from http://www.stroke.org/site/DocServer/STROKE_101_Fact_Sheet.pdf?docID=4541

18.Norton, A., Zipse, L., Marchina, S. & Schlaug, G. (2009)  Melodic Intonation Therapy: Shared Insights on How it is Done and Why it Might Help.  Annals of the New        York Academy of Sciences. 1169: 431-436.

19.Ozdemir, E., Norton, A. & Schlaug, G. (2006) Shared and Distinct Neural Correlates of Singing and Speaking.  NeuroImage. 33: 628-635.

20.Pitts, B. & Sheridan, S.  (2009)  Coping with Aphasia Pitts/Sheridan

21.Riecker, A., Wildgruber, D., Dogil, G., Grodd, W. & Ackermann, H. (2002) Hemispheric lateralization effects of rhythm implementation during syllable repetitions: an fMRI study. Neuroimage 16:169–176.

22.Rosen, H.J., Petersen, S.E., Linenweber, M., Snyder, A.Z., White, D.A., Chapman, L.,   Dromerick, A.W., Fiez, J.A. & Corbetta, M. (2000) Neural correlates of recovery from aphasia after damage to left inferior frontal cortex. Neurology 55: 1883-1894.

23.Saito, Y., Ishii, K., Yagi, K., Tatsumi, I.F. & Mizusawa, H. (2006) Cerebral Networks for Spontaneous and Synchronized Singing and Speaking. NeuroReport. 17(18): 1893-1897

24.Saur, D., Lange, R., Baumgaertner, A., Schraknepper, V., Willmes, K., Rijntjes, M. & Weiller, C. (2006) Dynamics of language reorganization after stroke. Brain  129: 1371–1384.

25.Schlaug, G., Marchina, S. & Norton, A. (2009) Evidence for plasticity in white matter tracts of patients with chronic broca’s aphasia undergoing intense intonation-based speech therapy. Annals of New York Academy of Sciences 1169:385-394

26.Sparks, R.W. & Holland, A.L. (1976) Method: Melodic Intonation Therapy for Aphasia. Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders. 41: 287–297.

27.Thaut, M.H. (2005) Rhythm, Music and the Brain: Scientific Foundations and Clinical Applications. New York: Routledge.

28.Winhuisen, L., Thiel, A., Schumacher, B., Kessler, J., Rudolf, J., Haupt, W.F. & Heiss, W.D. (2005)  Role of the Contralateral Inferior Frontal Gyrus in Recovery of            Language Function in Poststroke Aphasia: A Combined Repetitive Transcranial                 Magnetic Stimulation and Positron Emission Tomography Study. Stroke. 36: 1759-1763.

29.Yamadori, A., Osumi, Y., Masuhara, S.& Okubo, M. (1977) Preservation of Singing in Broca’s aphasia. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry. 40: 221-224.

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