The ability of right- and left-hemisphere-damaged individuals to produce and interpret prosodic cues marking phrasal boundaries
Baum, S. R., Pell, M. D., Leonard, C. & Gordon, J. K. (1997). Language and Speech, 40_4), 313-30.
Two experiments were conducted with the purpose of investigating the
ability of right- and left-hemisphere-damaged individuals to produce
and perceive the acoustic correlates to phrase boundaries. In the
production experiment, the utterance pink and black and green was
elicited in three different conditions corresponding to different
arrangements of colored squares. Acoustic analyses revealed that both
left- and right-hemisphere-damaged patients exhibited fewer of the
expected acoustic patterns in their productions than did normal control
subjects. The reduction in acoustic cues to phrase boundaries in the
utterances of both patient groups was perceptually salient to three
trained listeners. The perception experiment demonstrated a significant
impairment in the ability of both left-hemisphere-damaged and
right-hemisphere-damaged individuals to perceive phrasal groupings.
Results are discussed in relation to current hypotheses concerning the
cerebral lateralization of speech prosody.