2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2007.12.010
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Cognitive, linguistic and affective disturbances following a right superior cerebellar artery infarction: A case study

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Cited by 98 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…In the 1990s a possible role of the cerebellum in morphological, syntactic and lexical aspects of grammar was for the first time explored. These early studies indicated involvement of the cerebellum in the detection of deviations from predicted grammar rules such as subject-verb agreement or canonical word order [158, 160162][159, 163–165]. Subsequent investigations substantiated and extended this view to a wider spectrum of cerebellar contribution including motor-independent comprehensive grammar analysis of sentence structure [158].…”
Section: Cerebellar Contributions To Grammar Processing (M Adamaszek)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the 1990s a possible role of the cerebellum in morphological, syntactic and lexical aspects of grammar was for the first time explored. These early studies indicated involvement of the cerebellum in the detection of deviations from predicted grammar rules such as subject-verb agreement or canonical word order [158, 160162][159, 163–165]. Subsequent investigations substantiated and extended this view to a wider spectrum of cerebellar contribution including motor-independent comprehensive grammar analysis of sentence structure [158].…”
Section: Cerebellar Contributions To Grammar Processing (M Adamaszek)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequent investigations substantiated and extended this view to a wider spectrum of cerebellar contribution including motor-independent comprehensive grammar analysis of sentence structure [158]. Recent experimental and neuroimaging data indicates that the cerebellum interfaces with the cerebral areas involved in grammar processing by means of integrating specific cerebral processing signals in a feed-forward manner [34, 159, 162, 166]. Although most studies have shown that the right cerebellar hemisphere is part of the cerebral network subserving grammar processing [86, 157, 160, 162, 167], a few studies indicate that the left or even both cerebellar hemispheres may be involved in grammar processing as well [29, 158, 161].…”
Section: Cerebellar Contributions To Grammar Processing (M Adamaszek)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The vermis is involved in the processing of affective and fear-related responses such as anxiety (Reiman, 1997), grief (Gundel et al, 2003), and pain (Dimitrova et al, 2004). Many studies on cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome (CCAS) have ascribed the emotional disorders in these patients to vermal lesions (Marien et al, 2009;Schmahmann, 2004;Tavano and Borgatti, 2010). Neuroimaging studies have suggested that the cerebellum participates in affective circuits in which positive emotions are associated with the left cerebral hemisphere and negative emotions appear to be more aligned with the right hemisphere Silberman and Weingartner, 1986).…”
Section: Cerebellum and Amygdalamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the last two decades, an increasing number of studies have described cognitive impairments following damage to the cerebellum. Some reports have linked cerebellar lesions to difficulties in various cognitive domains, e.g., language and speech problems [4][5][6][7][8], visuo-spatial impairments [8][9][10], execu-tive dysfunctions and (verbal) working memory problems [11][12][13], learning disabilities [8,10,12], as well as impaired sequencing in cognitive domains [14,15]. In 1998, Schmahmann and Sherman tried to combine some of the described symptoms under the term cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome [16].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%