From singing to speaking: Why singing may lead to recovery of expressive language function in patients with Broca's aphasia

G Schlaug, S Marchina, A Norton - Music perception, 2008 - online.ucpress.edu
IT HAS BEEN REPORTED THAT PATIENTS WITH SEVERELY nonfluent aphasia are better
at singing lyrics than speaking the same words. This observation inspired the development …

From Singing to Speaking: Why Singing May Lead to Recovery of Expressive Language Function in Patients with Broca's Aphasia.

G Schlaug, S Marchina, A Norton - Music Perception, 2008 - europepmc.org
It has been reported that patients with severely nonfluent aphasia are better at singing lyrics
than speaking the same words. This observation inspired the development of Melodic …

FROM SINGING TO SPEAKING: WHY SINGING MAY LEAD TO RECOVERY OF EXPRESSIVE LANGUAGE FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH BROCA'S APHASIA

G SCHLAUG, S MARCHINA, A NORTON - Music Perception, 2008 - cir.nii.ac.jp
抄録< jats: p> IT HAS BEEN REPORTED THAT PATIENTS WITH SEVERELY nonfluent
aphasia are better at singing lyrics than speaking the same words. This observation inspired …

[PDF][PDF] FROM SINGING TO SPEAKING: WHY SINGING MAY LEAD TO RECOVERY OF EXPRESSIVE LANGUAGE FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH BROCA'S APHASIA

G SCHLAUG, S MARCHINA - musicianbrain.com
Selnes, 1999; Weiller et al., 1995). Still other studies report evidence for bihemispheric
language processing (Heiss & Thiel, 2006; Mimura, Kato, Sano, Kojima, Naeser, & Kashima …

[PDF][PDF] FROM SINGING TO SPEAKING: WHY SINGING MAY LEAD TO RECOVERY OF EXPRESSIVE LANGUAGE FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH BROCA'S APHASIA

G SCHLAUG, S MARCHINA - musicianbrain.gottfriedschlaug.org
Selnes, 1999; Weiller et al., 1995). Still other studies report evidence for bihemispheric
language processing (Heiss & Thiel, 2006; Mimura, Kato, Sano, Kojima, Naeser, & Kashima …

FROM SINGING TO SPEAKING: WHY SINGING MAY LEAD TO RECOVERY OF EXPRESSIVE LANGUAGE FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH BROCA'S APHASIA

G SCHLAUG, S MARCHINA, A NORTON - Music Perception, 2008 - JSTOR
IT HAS BEEN REPORTED THAT PATIENTS WITH SEVERELY nonfluent aphasia are better
at singing lyrics than speaking the same words. This observation inspired the development …

[PDF][PDF] FROM SINGING TO SPEAKING: WHY SINGING MAY LEAD TO RECOVERY OF EXPRESSIVE LANGUAGE FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH BROCA'S APHASIA

G SCHLAUG, S MARCHINA - musicianbrain.com
Selnes, 1999; Weiller et al., 1995). Still other studies report evidence for bihemispheric
language processing (Heiss & Thiel, 2006; Mimura, Kato, Sano, Kojima, Naeser, & Kashima …

[PDF][PDF] FROM SINGING TO SPEAKING: WHY SINGING MAY LEAD TO RECOVERY OF EXPRESSIVE LANGUAGE FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH BROCA'S APHASIA

G SCHLAUG, S MARCHINA - musicianbrain.gottfriedschlaug.org
Selnes, 1999; Weiller et al., 1995). Still other studies report evidence for bihemispheric
language processing (Heiss & Thiel, 2006; Mimura, Kato, Sano, Kojima, Naeser, & Kashima …

[PDF][PDF] FROM SINGING TO SPEAKING: WHY SINGING MAY LEAD TO RECOVERY OF EXPRESSIVE LANGUAGE FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH BROCA'S APHASIA

G SCHLAUG, S MARCHINA - mail.musicianbrain.com
Selnes, 1999; Weiller et al., 1995). Still other studies report evidence for bihemispheric
language processing (Heiss & Thiel, 2006; Mimura, Kato, Sano, Kojima, Naeser, & Kashima …

[PDF][PDF] 6.1 Study 1: From Singing to Speaking: Why Singing May Lead to Recovery of Expressive Language Function in Patients with Broca's Aphasia

G Schlaug, S Marchina - From Singing to Speaking: Using Melodic …, 2012 - zora.uzh.ch
It has been reported that patients with severly nonfluent aphasia are better at singing lyrics
than speaking the same words. This observation inspired the development of Melodic …