An international team of researchers, including scientists from the HSE Centre for Language and Brain, has identified the causes of impairments in expressing grammatical tense in people with aphasia.
Aphasia research group explores problems of language and its use resulting from brain damage, usually in the left hemisphere. Generally speaking, aphasia hampers the ability to produce and to ...
Barbara Fox, the author of "Once Upon Aphasia," embarked on an unexpected ... and meticulously documenting her progress in a personal journal. Although her balance remained shaky, requiring ...
If you had a stroke and have a current diagnosis of aphasia, you may be eligible for our research! We have a variety of research studies available in our lab in which to participate. For all studies, ...
The researchers – who publish their findings in the journal Brain today – hope that the treatment ... The researchers are based at the University of Manchester’s Neuroscience and Aphasia Research Unit ...
Dr. Suma Devanga (Speech Language Pathologist-Clinical Fellow) has secured WMU's 2018 Support for Faculty Scholars award to conduct research on aphasia treatment. The focus of this research is to ...
Jiyeon Lee is an Associate Professor of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences and the director of the Aphasia Research Lab at Purdue University. She received her PhD in Communication Sciences and ...
What makes expressing time difficult for aphasia patients? Researchers uncover language-specific struggles with encoding and retrieving verb tenses.