We investigated cerebral activity in six normal volunteers using PET to explore the hypothesis that the right hemisphere has a specific role in the interpretation of figurative aspects of language such as metaphors. We also mapped the anatomical structures involved in sentence comprehension. During regional cerebral blood flow measurement subjects were asked to perform three different linguistic tasks: (i) metaphorical comprehension; (ii) literal comprehension of sentences; and (iii) a lexical-decision task. We found that comprehension of sentences compared with the lexical-decision task, induced extensive activation in several regions of the left hemisphere, including the prefrontal and basal frontal cortex, the middle and inferior temporal gyri and temporal pole, the parietal cortex and the precuneus. Comprehension of metaphors was associated with similar activations in the left hemisphere, but in addition, a number of sites were activated in the right hemisphere: the prefrontal cortex, the middle temporal gyrus, the precuneus and the posterior cingulate. We conclude that the interpretation of language involves widespread distributed systems bilaterally with the right hemisphere having a special role in the appreciation of metaphors.
Left caloric vestibular stimulation is effective on both left and right hemianesthesia because it modulates the hemisphere that has a more complete representation of, or is capable to attend to, the whole somatosensory surface of the body. These results suggest a hardwired hemispheric asymmetry in hand representation, starting from a somatotopically organized brain region such as area SII.
SUMMARYThe Commission for Epilepsy Surgery of the Italian League Against Epilepsy (LICE) presents an overview of the techniques and methodologies of presurgical evaluation and of the surgical treatment of epilepsies. This overview is the result of the experience developed in the past years in the major Italian centers where programs of epilepsy surgery have been established, and it has the aim of offering a quick and easy reference tool for those involved in the treatment of patients with epilepsy. The sharing of different experiences has the additional aim of conforming and disseminating the employed techniques as well as the methods of selection and evaluation of patients. The synthetic coverage of the main issues concerning the presurgical workup and the available surgical options will hopefully provide a framework that may integrate and develop the contributions of every single center, in one of the more complex, challenging, and dynamic areas of neurological sciences.
The nal publication is available at Springer via https://doi.org/10.3758/s13415-013-0153-y Additional information: Use policyThe full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-pro t purposes provided that:• a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in DRO • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders.Please consult the full DRO policy for further details. Running title: Ambiguous emotions recognition in TLE.Ambiguous emotion recognition in temporal lobe epilepsy: the role of expression intensity. AbstractThe lateralization of emotion processing is currently debated and may be further explored by examining facial expression recognition (FER) impairments in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE).Furthermore, in individuals with TLE there is debate whether FER deficits are more pronounced in right than left. To shed light on this issue, individuals with TLE were tested with a FER task designed to be more sensitive than those classically used. Twenty-five right and thirty-two left TLE patients, candidates for surgery, and controls underwent a FER task composed of stimulishown not only at full blown intensities (100%) but also morphed to display lower intensity levels (35%, 50%, 75%). Results show that, compared to controls, right TLE patients show deficits in the recognition of all emotional categories. Furthermore, when considering valence, right TLE patients are impaired only in negative emotions recognition, but no deficits for positive emotions have been highlighted in left TLE patients. Finally, only right TLE patients impairment was found to be related to the age of epilepsy onset. Our work demonstrates that FER deficits in TLE span across multiple emotional categories and manifest depending on the laterality of the epileptic focus. Taken together our findings provide strongest evidence for the Right Hemisphere Model, but also partial support for Valence Model. We suggest that actual models are not exhaustive to explain emotional processing cerebral control and that further multistep models should be developed.
We investigated the anatomo‐electro‐clinical features and clinical outcome of surgical resections strictly confined to the parietal lobe in 40 consecutive patients who received surgery for pharmacoresistant seizures. The population was subcategorized into a paediatric (11 subjects; mean age at surgery: 7.2+/−3.7 years) and an adult group (29 patients; mean age at surgery: 30+/−10.8 years). The paediatric group more frequently exhibited personal antecedents, neurological impairment, high seizure frequency, and dysplastic lesions. Nonetheless, compared with adults, children had better outcome and more frequently reached definitive drug discontinuation after surgery. After a mean follow‐up of 9.4 years (range: 3.1–16.7), 30 subjects (75%) were classified as Engel Class I. The presence of multiple types of aura in the same patient, as well as a high incidence of secondary generalization, represented a characteristic feature of parietal seizures and did not correlate negatively with surgical outcome. A total resection of the epileptogenic zone and a localizing/regional interictal EEG were statistically significant predictive factors of outcome. Intracerebral investigation, performed in 55% of cases, contributed to complete tailored resections of the epileptogenic area and determination of prognosis. Frequent subjective manifestations of parietal lobe seizures, such as vertiginous, cephalic and visual‐moving sensations, underscore their potential misdiagnosis as non‐epileptic events.
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